The Morning Call

Passenger who landed plane credits help of ‘hand of God’

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A Florida man with no flying experience who kept his cool while landing a small plane says “the hand of God” was with him after the pilot collapsed at the controls.

Darren Harrison told NBC’s “Today” show that he was relaxing in the back of the single-engine Cessna after a fishing trip in the Bahamas when the pilot told him and another passenger: “Guys, I gotta tell you I don’t feel good.”

“He said, ‘I’ve got a headache, and I’m fuzzy, and I just don’t feel right,” the 39-year-old flooring salesman said. “And I said, ‘What do we need to do?’ and at that point he didn’t respond at all.”

Harrison climbed into the cockpit and saw that the plane was diving, and fast.

“All I saw when I came up to the front was water out the right window, and I knew it was coming quick. At that point I knew if I didn’t react, that we would die.”

Harrison said he reached over the unconsciou­s pilot and grabbed the controls, slowly pulling back the stick to level the plane. It was a common-sense move, he said.

“I knew if I went up and yanked that, the airplane would stall,” he said. “And I also knew that at the rate we were going, we were going way too fast, and it would probably rip the wings off of the airplane.”

That, he said, was “the scariest part of the whole story.”

With help from the other passenger, he moved him out of the pilot’s seat. Harrison jumped in.

He reached an air traffic controller in Florida. Asked if he knew the plane’s position, Harrison said the GPS was out so he had no idea.

The air traffic controller then asked what he could see.

“I see the state of Florida, and I see a small airport,” Harrison told him.

At this point, he refused to let fear set in.

“When I was flying and saw the state of Florida, at that second I knew I’m going to land there,” he said. “I don’t know what the outcome’s going to be, I don’t know how it’s going to happen, but I knew I’m going to have to land this airplane because there’s no other option.”

Harrison said he had to get home to his wife, Britney, seven months pregnant with their first child.

“In my mind I knew I wasn’t going to die, and the thought never crossed my mind to call and tell my wife ‘bye,’” Harrison said.

Air Traffic Controller Robert Morgan coached Harrison into a safe landing at Palm Beach Internatio­nal Airport.

“I said thank you for everything, and I threw the headset on the dash, and I said the biggest prayer I’ve ever said in my life,” Harrison recalled.

“That’s when all the emotion set in,” he added.

He said he offered a “thankful prayer for the safety and everything that had happened. But the last part of the prayer and the strongest part was for the guy in the back because I knew it was not a good situation.”

The pilot was taken to a hospital and is expected to be released early this week, Harrison said.

 ?? WPTV ?? Emergency personnel surround a Cessna plane May 10 at Palm Beach Internatio­nal Airport in West Palm Beach, Fla., after a passenger with no experience was able to land it safely.
WPTV Emergency personnel surround a Cessna plane May 10 at Palm Beach Internatio­nal Airport in West Palm Beach, Fla., after a passenger with no experience was able to land it safely.

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