The Citizen (Gauteng)

‘Suicidal’ man did no wrong

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Seattle–A 29-year-old “suicidal” airport worker who commandeer­ed an empty plane from Seattle’s main airport and took it on an hour-long flight chased by F-15 fighter jets before crashing into a small island did not commit any security violations, officials said on Saturday.

Horizon Air employee Richard Russell told an air traffic controller he was “just a broken man” minutes before dying late on Friday in the Bombardier Q400 twin-engine turboprop plane, appearing to apologise for his actions. Law enforcemen­t officials identified him to US media.

Authoritie­s ruled out any link to terror. But consternat­ion grew over the safety gaps that allowed an airport worker to easily gain access to a commercial airliner and fly it over a major metropolit­an area.

“Everybody’s stunned ... that something like this would happen,” said recently retired Horizon operationa­l supervisor Rick Christenso­n. “How could it? Everybody’s been through background checks.”

Russell “had access legitimate­ly” to the plane, said Mike Ehl, director of aviation operations at the airport in the northweste­rn US state of Washington, adding that “no security violations were committed”.

Video taken by a bystander showed the 76-seat plane making a big, slow loop-the-loop as US Air Force F-15 jets gave chase, then flying low over Puget Sound before crashing into sparsely populated Ketron Island, setting trees on fire.

“To our knowledge, he didn’t have a pilot’s license,” Gary Beck, CEO of Alaska Airlines affiliate Horizon, told reporters.

“Commercial aircraft are complex machines ... I have no idea how he achieved that experience.”

Ruling out a terror link, Pierce County Sheriff Paul Pastor noted that “most terrorists don’t do loops over the water.

“I have an idea that this might have been a joyride gone terribly wrong.” –

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