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This was sent to me and it is a passenger's version and unverified as to what happened during and
after the crash...Interesting to read……...
Below is an e-mail from the father of one of the passengers who
was aboard the Asiana flight that crashed yesterday at San Francisco (the
father is a friend of a friend). It's an unvarnished recount through the
eyes of one of the lucky ones who emerged virtually unscathed. His
observations about the post-crash response do raise concerns about the level of
coordination and preparedness at that major airport.
We finally got to talk directly with (son) Brian
this morning about noon. He got home about 10:30 last night after a
terrifying and frustrating day. He is scraped up a little and banged up
but had no injuries that required treatment. The following account is as
I can remember from what he told us.
Brian and part of his group was in row 16 some more in
row 18 and the remainder in row 20. They had had a great week in South
Korea and the flight had been uneventful. As they neared the
approach Brian felt like they were too high as the plane descended sharply and
then he heard the engines spool up as if the pilot realized that he had
descended too much. Brian said the nose pitched up but the plane did not
raise much. He said that there was a very loud impact as the tail hit and
then a much larger impact as the nose slammed down. He then said the
plane slewed to the left and rose up to about 45 degrees with the right wing
high because he said he was looking down at the girl across the aisle from
him.
The plane slammed down again and spun further down the runway and
ended up in the dirt several hundred yards from the seawall that they had
hit. Brian and the people near him were trying to go forward to exit on
the left but there was a problem with that door (it may be the door that they
are now reporting that had the slide deploy inside the cabin) so they turned
around so they could go out the back through the hole that was the back of the
aircraft that had been sheared off. They were apparently near the end of
a long line and were beginning to see smoke and dust. He looked back and
saw that they were getting the front door open and the slide deployed so they
turned around and went back and went out the slide in front of the wing.
He said he felt badly that he had run into two elderly ladies that were having
trouble exiting the slide but he helped them up. He and the part of the
group that was with him ran around to the back of the plane where the rest of
the group had jumped to the ground through the hole. They moved away from
the aircraft and were watching the fire crews begin to deploy and foam down the
aircraft which was burning.
One of his friends (Elliot Stone) was looking
back up the runway and saw a flight attendant several hundred yards away waving
at them and trying to walk. They tried to get the attention of the
firefighters and police (no paramedics on scene) to no avail. Brian,
Elliot and two others from their group ran back toward the attendant they could
see. Elliot stayed with that attendant and Brian went on down the
runway. He came upon a young woman who was obviously dying (unconscious
but moving a little) and was going to stay with her but saw another woman who
was a flight attendant nearby who was moving and bleeding. He went to her
and saw she was very seriously hurt with facial, head and spinal
injuries. He held her hand and talked with her and wanted to get a
blanket for her but she begged him to stay with her which he did. The
other two also found injured flight attendants and tried to help them.
They were waiving and trying to get the attention of the police or fire
personnel to divert some of the arriving EMS resources to them. An
airport staff person arrived in a truck and also tried to get help for them.
According to Elliot on CNN it was 20 to 30 minutes before they got any
help. It may not have been that long in real time but in their minds it
was clearly way way after the triage had been set up back by the plane and
others with lesser injuries were being treated and transported.
They
finally did get the attention of two ambulances and they arrived and according
to Brian were very leisurely in getting their gear out and arranged before even
approaching the victims. Brian said one of the EMS staff was so obese he had
a hard time getting out of the ambulance. The injured were put on
backboards, neck braces etc. and loaded up. A policeman had arrived and
tried to order Brian and his crew back to the plane because this was a crime
scene. Brian and co. refused saying they would only after the injured
women were transported. The ambulances left and again the policeman
ordered them back to the aircraft. They were going to comply until Brian
looked over and saw that they had left one of the women strapped to a backboard
behind. Someone had put a cloth over her eyes to shield her
from the sun but I guess the other crew assumed that she had expired and left
her there. She was not dead and was still moving. Brian and
his friends just completely lost it with the cop and refused to leave until
another ambulance arrived to collect her. Brian and Elliot and
friends are EXTREMELY angry over the EMS response. They then
began walking back toward the airplane and Brian found one of his
shoes, a book and a shirt from his suitcase but couldn’t see his suitcase or
other stuff from it including his medicine.
The story goes on and on from there with directions and
counter directions and counter counter directions over the next 8
hours. After conflicting direction from the police, FAA,
Homeland Security, FBI etc. Elliot had had enough and called CNN and began
giving interviews which you may have heard on the air which are not at all
flattering of the response to the crash. The problem is that since
Elliot’s phone battery was dead, he borrowed Brian’s phone so now Brian is
getting all these calls for follow-up interviews and calls from other news and
television agencies because CNN apparently shared the call back number which
went to Brian’s phone.
They were finally released and got home about
10:30. He was not able to sleep much (neither did we) and still sounds
very angry today. I am sure that some of that is a reaction to the things he
experienced and saw yesterday and some just may be exhaustion and shot nerves.
I told Brian he really needs to share what they went through (with the EMS
response) with the NTSB and the San Francisco FD. I don’t believe the
LAFD would ever allow one of their personnel to be so obese that they could not
effectively perform their duties.
We thank you all for your thoughts, prayers and
expressions of concern.
D & S
4 comments:
That confirms it, bad behaving agencies infiltrate every part of your life.
Truth really kills ya doesn't it? What about if I had received a glowing report of the crash, no one got injured, no one got killed, and it was a peachy keen landing. Would that make ya happy? I doubt it. What exactly is your complaint this time?
don't understand your comment, anony at 4-15.
That was interesting. Thanks for posting it.
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