Flight 93 Passenger Said He Planned Action
Crash Victims Made Final Calls Via Cell Phones
POSTED: 12:19 p.m. EDT September 12, 2001
Shortly before United Airlines Flight 93
crashed in southwestern Pennsylvania, a passenger told his wife the
plane had been hijacked -- and that he was going to do something
about it.
In his phone call, passenger Thomas Burnett told his wife,
Deena, "I know we're all going to die -- there's three of us who
are going to do something about it." Then, Burnett told his wife,
"I love you, honey" and the call ended, the family's priest, the
Rev. Frank Colacicco, told the San Francisco Chronicle.
It wasn't clear what caused the plane to go down when it did or
whether the passengers had any effect.
Several people were able to make calls from the plane before the
Boeing 757 slammed into a grassy field about 80 miles southeast of
Pittsburgh. Rescue crews who reached the scene shortly after 10
a.m. found a deep V-shaped gouge filled with smoldering rubble.
Forty-five people had been on board.
"We're being hijacked!" one man repeatedly told dispatchers
who answered 911 lines before the plane crashed in western
Pennsylvania.
Tuesday's hijacking was the last of four closely timed terrorist
attacks, following the two crashes into New York's World Trade
Center towers and a third into the Pentagon.
U.S. officials told The Associated Press on condition of
anonymity that the Secret Service had alerted the White House that
the hijackers may have been headed for Camp David, the presidential
retreat in Maryland. Fearing the White House might be a target, the
Secret Service diverted President Bush, who had been in Florida, to
Louisiana and then Nebraska.
Flight 93 left Newark at 8:01 a.m. EDT headed for San Francisco.
As it approached Cleveland, radar showed the plane banked left and
headed back toward southwest Pennsylvania. Cleveland Mayor Michael
R. White had said that air traffic controllers said they could hear
screaming on a plane they communicated with.
On board, flight attendant CeeCee Lyles grabbed her cell phone
and call her husband and four sons in Fort Myers, Fla.
"She called him and let him know how much she loved him and the
boys," said her aunt, Mareya Schneider. During the call, he heard
people screaming in the background, Schneider said.
In California, Alice Hoglan picked up her phone about 9:45 EDT
to the hear the voice of her son, Mark Bingham, 31.
"He said, 'I want you to know I love you very much. I'm calling
you from the plane. We've been taken over. There are three men that
say they have a bomb," Hoglan said. The phone went dead a short
time later.
The caller who reached emergency dispatchers said he was inside
a locked bathroom on the plane.
Dispatcher Glenn Cramer said the man repeatedly said, "We're
being hijacked!" and that his call was not a hoax.
"He heard some sort of explosion and saw white smoke coming
from the plane and we lost contact with him," Cramer said. The man
never identified himself.
Tuesday night, FBI agents and forensic archeologists began
picking through tiny pieces of rubble. Neither the cockpit voice
recorder nor the flight data recorder had been recovered, and it
was expected to be days before the victims could be identified.
In Pennsylvania's Richland Township, Cambria County, on Tuesday morning, police
Chief Jim Mock said air traffic control coordinators reported a
large aircraft heading toward the John Murtha Johnstown Cambria
County Municipal Airport. The controllers said the aircraft would
not identify itself.
Minutes later, the plane crashed in rural Somerset County, about
20 miles away.
"It was like an atomic bomb hit," said John Walsh, 72, who
heard the crash and drove to the site while still in his bathrobe.
"When I got there, the plane was obliterated. You couldn't see the
cockpit or the wings or nothing."
Mark Stahl was listening to reports about the World Trade Center
attacks on the radio when he heard Flight 93 crash. In nearby
Shanksville, the crash sent people running to their doors, and the
fire whistles began blowing.
"I didn't know what to think," Stahl said. "It was
shocking."
United CEO James Goodwin said the airline was sending a team to
Pennsylvania to assist the investigation and provide assistance to
family members. United said it had identified all passengers and
crew and was notifying families. No names were released
immediately.
"Today's events are a tragedy and our prayers are with everyone
at this time," Goodwin said.
Copyright 2001 by ThePittsburghChannel. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.



