Cecelia Cichan was just 4 when she alone survived a 1987 airliner crash in Detroit that killed 154 passengers and crew. The disaster claimed the lives of her entire immediate family, including both parents and her brother.
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Rescuers found her alive under a seat not far from their bodies. Now an adult, she has a tattoo of an airliner on her left wrist, signifying a fiery ordeal that she has no memory of. Cichan remains protective of her privacy and unsure how much she wants to share her experience with others. She says she feels 'almost inferior' because others 'had to work to survive, and I just woke up in the hospital.'
Details. Flight: Northwest Airlines Flight 255.
Route: Detroit to Phoenix. Aircraft: McDonnell Douglas MD-82. Investigation: The flight crew failed to set the plane's flaps and slats correctly for takeoff, according to the National Transportation Safety Board. A warning system failed to alert them of the problem, which probably caused the crash, said an NTSB report.
Somehow co-pilot Jim Polehinke survived inside the plane's mangled cockpit. 'It was as if an angel had wrapped his arms around him and held him,' his wife said.An airline co-pilot, Jim Polehinke was at the controls in 2006 when his jetliner crashed during takeoff from Lexington, Kentucky, killing all 49 others on board. Polehinke lost his left leg as a result of the incident. He has spent years fighting accusations by investigators that he and his pilot were to blame. Recently, his emotional journey has led him out of darkness and anger.
He's turned a corner onto a more enriching and hopeful path.Details. Flight: Comair Flight 5191. Route: Lexington, Kentucky, to Atlanta. Aircraft: Bombardier Canadair Regional Jet 100ER.
Investigation: The flight crew failed 'to use available cues and aids to identify the airplane's location on the airport surface during taxi,' the NTSB said. The crew also failed 'to cross-check and verify that the airplane was on the correct runway before takeoff.'
Firefighters douse wreckage of a Lockheed Electra which crashed January 21, 1985, killing all 71 on board, except George Lamson Jr.George Lamson Jr. Is on a quest.
The only survivor of a 1985 airline crash that killed his father and 69 others in Reno, Nevada, Lamson has been seeking out sole survivors like himself, to learn from them but also to help them. Moments before the doomed takeoff, Lamson and his father changed seats.
Lamson will never know whether that decision saved his life. As the plane was about to crash, Lamson made a pact with God that if he survived, he would work to do good and help others. He desperately wishes to honor that promise.Details. Flight: Galaxy Airlines Flight 203. Route: Reno, Nevada, to Minneapolis. Aircraft: Lockheed Electra L-188.
Investigation: The crash was probably caused by the failure of the captain and copilot to control and monitor the plane's flight path and airspeed after an 'unexpected vibration shortly after takeoff,' according to the NTSB. Ground handlers 'failed to properly close an air start access door, which led to the vibration,' the NTSB said.