Global Times

Investigat­ors find Seattle plane black box

Baggage handler described as ‘suicidal’ when he flew off

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US investigat­ors on Sunday said they found the flight data recorder of the Horizon Air plane stolen by a troubled Seattle airport worker amid plane wreckage on a sparsely populated island in Washington state.

After falling through several 30-meter lines of trees, the Bombardier Q400 plane broke up into pieces small enough to pick up by hand, National Transporta­tion Safety Board (NTSB) Western Pacific Region chief Debra Eckrote told CNN.

“You couldn’t even tell it was a plane except for some of the bigger sections, like the wing section,” Eckrote said. “Even the small sections, most of it doesn’t resemble a plane.”

Ekrote said that the flight data recorder – commonly known as the airplane’s “black box” – was burned but otherwise intact.

NTSB investigat­ors will send the recorder to Washington D.C. to analyze the data for clues next week.

Two F-15 fighter jets chased the twinengine turboprop plane that baggage handler Richard Russell hijacked late Friday.

During the hour he spent in the air, Russell flew the plane in a loop – an improbable stunt caught on video by a surprised bystander – then slammed it into the small, heavily forested Ketron Island in Puget Sound.

Authoritie­s ruled out any link to terror, and determined Russell had flown alone. No one besides Russell was hurt, and the F-15s did not shoot down the plane, according to officials.

The local sheriff described Russell, nicknamed “Beebo,” as “suicidal” when he flew off in an empty passenger plane from Seattle’s main airport late Friday. Colleagues remembered him as being “quiet” and “very friendly.”

Russell’s family said the incident came as a “complete shock to us.”

“It may seem difficult for those watching at home to believe, but Beebo was a warm, compassion­ate man,” the family said in a letter, which they said would be their only statement.

We are “stunned and heartbroke­n” by the incident, the letter read.

Russell’s role at Horizon, an Alaska Airlines affiliate where he had worked since 2015, involved towing aircraft, loading and unloading cargo and baggage, and cleaning the aircraft, officials said.

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