5 white-knuckled minutes aboard Flight 1549

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By David B. Caruso, Associated Press Writer – Sun Jan 18, 8:49 am

NEW YORK – The birds flew majestically, in perfect formation, and the co-pilot saw them coming.

For a moment, it looked like they would pass beneath US Airways Flight 1549, but when Capt. Chesley B. Sullenberger looked up, they were there in his windscreen. Big. Dark brown. Lots of them.

His first instinct was to duck.

Then there were thumps, a burning smell, and silence as both jet engines cut out.

For a moment, the Airbus A320 hung in the sky 3,000 feet above the Bronx, its engines knocked so completely dead that one flight attendant said it sounded like being in a library.

Investigators provided this dramatic new description Saturday of what unfolded on the flight in the five brief minutes between its takeoff from LaGuardia Airport on Thursday and its textbook splashdown in the Hudson River.

The plane had been in the air for only 90 seconds when disaster struck. Air traffic controllers hadn't picked up the birds on their radar screens and were still giving climbing instructions when the pilot radioed that something had gone very wrong.

"Aaah, this is Cactus 1549," he said. "We lost thrust in both engines. We are turning back toward LaGuardia."

But he announced a new destination within moments. LaGuardia was out. So was Teterboro Airport in New Jersey.

Sullenberger reasoned that his jet was "too low, too slow" and near too many tall buildings to reach any airport. And heading for Teterboro would mean risking a "catastrophic" crash in a populated neighborhood.

"We can't do it," he told air traffic control. "We're gonna be in the Hudson."

National Transportation Safety Board member Kitty Higgins recounted those radio transmissions and gave a detailed summary of Sullenberger's testimony to the investigation team on Saturday. She also recounted the NTSB's interview with the plane's first officer, Jeff Skiles, and three flight attendants.

Their account illustrated how quickly things deteriorated during the flight, and laid out the split-second command decisions that ultimately ensured that everyone aboard the plane survived.

The flight was supposed to have been the last leg of a four-trip day. The crew had begun the day in Pittsburgh, flown to Charlotte, N.C., then to LaGuardia, and were to head back to Charlotte in the afternoon. They got departure clearance at 3:25 p.m., and a minute later the jet was 700 feet in the air, heading north.

The birds came out of nowhere, Higgins said. They hadn't been on the radar screen of the air traffic controller who approved the departure, although other radar facilities later confirmed that their path intersected the jet as it climbed past 2,900 feet.

Back in the cabin, the passengers instantly knew something was wrong. They heard a thump, then eerie silence. A haze hung in the air. The flight attendants smelled something metallic burning.

"I think we hit a bird," said a passenger in first class.

In the cockpit, Sullenberger took over flying from Skiles, who had handled the takeoff, but had less experience in the Airbus.

"Your aircraft," the co-pilot said.

While the pilot quickly leveled the plane off to keep it from stalling and thought about where to land, Skiles kept trying to restart the engines. He also began working through a three-page list of procedures for an emergency landing. Normally, those procedures begin at 35,000 feet. This time, he started at 3,000.

Sullenberger made a sweeping left turn and took the gliding jet over the George Washington Bridge, and scanned the river, his best bet.

Pilots are trained to set down near a ship if they ditch, so they can be rescued before they drown or freeze to death in frigid seas. Sullenberger picked the perfect spot. The channel was 50 feet deep and clear of obstructions, but only minutes by boat from Manhattan's commuter ferry terminals.

It happened so fast, the pilots never had time to throw the aircraft's "ditch switch," which seals off vents and holes in the fuselage to make it more seaworthy.

Sullenberger issued a command over the intercom, "Brace for impact." Only 3 1/2 minutes had elapsed since the bird strike.

"Brace! Brace! Head down!" the flight attendants shouted to the passengers.

Security cameras on a Manhattan pier captured the spectacular landing. The jet came in easy, like it was coming down on land, and threw up spray as it slid on its belly.

Two flight attendants likened it to a hard landing — nothing more. There was one impact, no bounce, then a gradual deceleration.

"Neither one of them realized that they were in the water," Higgins said.

That changed quickly. The crew got two doors open. One water slide deployed automatically. The other had to be activated by hand. Passengers grabbed life preservers and seat cushions.

At the rear of the plane, a third flight attendant stopped a passenger from opening a rear door and letting in a gush of water, then made her way forward.

As the passengers made their way out onto the wings, she started to feel woozy. Only then did she notice that her leg had a severe cut — the most serious wound to anyone on board.

Sullenberger walked the cabin twice before abandoning ship.

He hadn't spoken to reporters yet on Saturday, but Higgins said, "He could not be more happy that he got everyone off the airplane safely."

The plane, too, was finally pulled from the river late Saturday night.

The bottom of the fuselage appeared to have been shredded and torn. Big chunks of loose paneling peeled away as it was lifted onto a barge — a sign, perhaps, of how close the jet came to breaking apart during a landing hard enough to rip metal, but slow and low enough to save 155 lives.

___

Associated Press writers Adam Goldman, Larry Neumeister and Colleen Long contributed to this report.
 

peplaw06

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That video of the splashdown at the bottom of that page is crazy tomson.
 

Faerluna

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A friend of mine was on the highway and saw it happen. He has a pic posted on his FB of the plane in the water right as it came to rest, before any rescue boats got there.

Another friend said he could see it right out the window of his office.

Crazy!
 

Route 66

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* News
* World news
* New York plane crash

Passengers tell the inside story of US Airways flight 1549
When a packed Airbus splashed down in New York's Hudson river last week the drama was only starting. Michael Wilson and Russ Buettner reveal the remarkable story of how the drama unfolded inside the cabin as passengers struggled through water and chaos to safety

* Michael Wilson and Russ Buettner
* The Observer, Sunday 18 January 2009
* Article history

Some passengers screamed, others tucked their heads between their knees, and several prayed over and over: "Lord, forgive me for my sins." But a man named Josh who was sitting in the exit row did exactly what everyone is supposed to do but few ever do: he pulled out the safety card and read the instructions on how to open the exit door.

US Airways Flight 1549 smacked into the Hudson river the way a speedboat lands after jumping over a wake - with a thud that rattled teeth and nerves and stunned the cabin silent. It was as if everyone was waiting for someone else to shout in pain and no one did.

Then Josh stood up. "Someone tried to pull the door in," another passenger recalled, "and he said, 'No, you've got to throw it out.' He twisted it and threw it out."

Thus began some of the most harrowing minutes of what the New York governor, David A Paterson, described as the Miracle on the Hudson. It was a perfect landing and a perfect ending: everyone survived. But from the moment the plane hit the water to the moment the last person reached dry land, scores of human dramas unfolded.

Friendships were struck on a frigid wing. Chivalrous heroes emerged beside selfish elbow-thrusters in what one survivor described as an "orderly mess" and another called "controlled panic". There was tension, co-operation and even pure comedy, as more than a dozen passengers recounted in interviews the day after in New York, Charlotte, North Carolina, and beyond.

There was the woman in the fur coat who asked a stranger to go back inside the slowly sinking plane to fetch her purse. The man who carried his suit bag on to the wing with him. The mother who had to climb over seats holding her nine-month-old son to avoid a stampede and the man who eventually helped them to safety. An older woman who walked with great difficulty and a young one who tenderly kissed her fiancé before the landing. And the prayers: from simple pleas to the heavens to the Lord's Prayer, only halfway completed when the jet began to swim.

The flight, which left LaGuardia airport late after a gate change, was packed with a diverse cross-section of people: 23 frequent-flying Bank of America executives returning home after meetings in New York; a band of buddies on a golf trip to Myrtle Beach, South Carolina; a 74-year-old man who had just attended his brother's funeral; a family trying to visit a grandmother before her surgery. And, in seat 13F, Emma Sophina, 26, a pop singer from Australia, who was working on a song called "Bittersweet", forever linked in her mind now to a day that was anything but.

Martin Sosa, 48, who lives in New York's West Village and was travelling with his wife and two young children, recalled thinking, "OK, so you survived the impact, now you are going to drown." He added: "The plane is slowly sinking and there's no movement to the outside."

Inside, as if heeding one collective thought, everyone moved to the rear of the cabin, only to find the exit doors there locked tight and water rising as the tail dipped below the surface. "If that door opened, everything would go under," said Brad Wentzell, 31, a patio-door salesman from Charlotte, the flight's destination. The crowd turned and began moving up the aisle all at once.

"Everybody's blocking everybody off and there's a woman and a child," Wentzell said. "She's screaming that people were blocking them off."

The woman was Sosa's wife, Tess, who was carrying their nine-month-old son, Damian. Sosa was with their four-year-old, Sofia. "People were just saying, 'Move, move, move!'," he recalled. "Some people were actually gracious enough to let me go by with a child and kind of move my way up."

But his wife was having a more difficult time and finally began trying to crawl over the backs of seats. "She didn't want to get crushed by the stampede," her husband said. Another passenger heard someone cry: "Get the baby out!"

Wentzell, the door salesman, moved to help. "I kind of bear-hugged them and picked them up and said, 'You're coming with me,' and carried them to the front to the exit," he said.

He passed them off to a stranger standing at the door, who helped them on to a wing. But the life raft attached to the plane was upside down in the river, just out of reach. Wentzell turned and found another passenger, Carl Bazarian, an investment banker from Florida who, at 62, was twice his age. Wentzell grabbed the wrist of Bazarian, who grabbed a third man who held on to the plane. Wentzell then leaned out to flip the raft.

"Carl was Iron Man that day," Wentzell said. "We got the raft stabilised and we got on." A man went into the water, and the door salesman and the banker hauled him aboard. He curled in a foetal position, freezing.

On another wing, Craig Black, a 46-year-old auditor, stood at the tip and thought of the Titanic, as in, he said, "there wouldn't have been enough rafts for everyone".

Don Norton, 35, one of three passengers who work at LendingTree.com, a Charlotte-based financial services company, had opened one of the other emergency exits. Then he had to work out what to do with the hatch, finally tossing it into the river. He was the first to step on to the slippery wing and struggled to maintain his balance in his black Aldo dress shoes as he made room for those behind. About 20 or 30 people had joined him when he realised that in his rush to remove the door he had forgotten to grab a seat cushion - how many hundreds of times had he heard that announcement? At that moment, "the woman next to me handed me my seat cushion," he recalled. "She had hers and handed me mine. We bonded."

He needed it, too, because the New York Waterway ferry stopped about three feet from the wing's edge, so he had to jump in and swim. The cushion kept his head dry. Lucille Palmer, 85, grabbed for her purse. Her daughter, Diane Higgins, 58, told her to leave it.

Dick Richardson, 57, a frequent flyer, had, on takeoff, done his ritual count of the rows between his seat and the nearest exit (eight) before closing his eyes to try to sleep. On impact, he moved his BlackBerry from his belt clip to the inside pocket of his blue-grey tweed blazer.

Debbie Ramsey, 48, of Knoxville, Tennessee, said she hesitated for a minute over leaving her Eddie Bauer down jacket and her carry-on bag containing the chocolates she had bought for her two-year-old grandson, but grabbed her seat cushion instead.

Dave Sanderson, 47, a salesman for Oracle, said he saw a woman in her 60s pulling her luggage out of the overhead bin. "I just started screaming, 'Get out, get out!' She said, 'I need my stuff,' Sanderson said. "Another gentleman who did a great job - he's a hero - actually picked her up and threw her on the lifeboat." Her luggage was floating in the river.

David Sontag, who had just buried his brother in New York, recalled a man in the doorway, demanding that the passengers count off as they passed; now he believes it was the hero-pilot, Captain Chesley B Sullenberger III.

Moments earlier, Nick Gamache, 32, a software salesman, had sent his wife a text message that read, "Planes on fire love you and the kids," so he was naturally in a hurry to update her. But he paused as the pilot told him to carefully step into the raft.

On the wing, Laurie Crane, 58, watched the water rise to her waist. "I'm like, 'I'm not supposed to drown,' " she said. " 'This isn't the way I'm going to go. Keep fighting.' So I did."

The Sosa family made their way slowly on to the right wing. "We were being very cautious, because we didn't want to lose hold of our children and many people were trying to grab our children away from us," Sosa said. Indeed, Sanderson - who said that since 9/11 he says a silent prayer every time he boards a flight - recalled Sosa "standing there screaming".

"The ladies on the lifeboat said, 'Give us the baby, give us the baby, throw us the baby'," Sanderson said. "And she wouldn't do it." Eventually, he said, "the other guy who was on the wing and myself sort of grabbed her and heaved".

There was no room on the overcrowded raft for Sosa. "It was kind of first come, first served," he said. "I have to say, some things could have been done a little differently to get my wife and kids on board first."

Sosa ended up chest-deep in the frigid water and was soon unable to feel his legs - his fingers stayed numb throughout Friday - but the children were fine and joined their parents on the Today show on Friday morning. "My daughter said, 'Daddy, the plane turned into a boat'," Sosa recalled.

The rescue boats streamed towards the jet from all directions. A police helicopter hovered just above the river, and divers dropped down.

Aboard one of the ferries that helped in the rescue, Captain Sullenberger took a metal clipboard with the manifest up to the wheelhouse, and used the emergency services radio network to get a count from all the other vessels: everyone was alive.

Billy Campbell, 49, a television executive, had watched water seeping through seams in the plane's windows and, seeing the clogged aisles, started climbing over the seats instead. His waterlogged shoes gave him little traction, so he would put a knee on a seat, fall and keep moving. He reached the exit on the right wing, but it was blocked. The exit on the left was clear, but the wing was full of people.

The pilot and the flight attendants had beckoned Campbell to the front, and he ended up on the same raft as the pilot. "I said, 'Thank you' and held his arm," Campbell recalled, "and he said, 'You're welcome'."

Maryann Bruce, 48, of Cornelius, North Carolina, said that while others were "thinking of dying, I was actually thinking about living. I wanted to see my kids and my husband." She said she had survived disasters before, including the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Centre, where she worked then.

"I must have nine lives," she said. "I was vacationing in Honolulu and had to be evacuated for a tsunami. I was skiing in Denver and had an avalanche. I was at the big LA earthquake."

At a downtown hotel where survivors waited to meet airline representatives, one of the passengers ordered a martini. Before long, nine of the passengers were exchanging stories and wine was poured, and someone decided that he had seen enough of New York City for one day, thank you.

The group returned to LaGuardia, where they boarded US Airways Flight 2591 to Charlotte, which took off just before 10pm.

"They applauded us," said Wentzell, the door salesman. "We had some wine and we thought about just how great it was to be alive."
 
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