Airline Employee Steals a Plane and Fatally Crashes Near Seattle Airport

Tragedy hit Seattle as an airline employee stole a plane seemingly to commit suicide before crashing near Seattle-Tacoma International Airport.

Alasha Airlines
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Image via Getty/George Rose

Alasha Airlines

The New York Times reports 29-year-old airline employee Richard Russell stole a plane and went into the air last night. Less than an hour later, the plane crashed and Ketron Island near Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, killing the pilot. Russell was believed to be suicidal.

Some dude stole a plane from #Seatac (Allegedly), did a loop-the-loop, ALMOST crashed into #ChambersBay, then crossed in front of our party, chased by fighter jets and subsequently crashed. Weird times. pic.twitter.com/Ra4LcIhwfU

— bmbdgty (@drbmbdgty) August 11, 2018

"An airline employee conducted an unauthorized takeoff without passengers at Sea-Tac" read a tweet from the airport. "Aircraft has crashed in south Puget Sound. Normal operations at Sea-Tac Airport have resumed."

An airline employee conducted an unauthorized takeoff without passengers at Sea-Tac; aircraft has crashed in south Puget Sound. Normal operations at Sea-Tac Airport have resumed.

— Seattle-Tacoma Intl. Airport (@flySEA) August 11, 2018

The county sheriff’s office has since confirmed that Russell acted alone and confirmed that this was not a terrorist attack. "We know who he is. No others involved," read their tweet. There were no passengers on-board.

Follow this thread for official info. This is not a terrorist incident. Confirmed info .. this is a single suicide male. We know who he is. No others involved.

— Pierce Co Sheriff (@PierceSheriff) August 11, 2018

During the incident, an air traffic control official was able to correspond with him in the air.

"I got a lot of people that care about me and it’s gonna disappoint them to hear that I did this," said Russell. "I would like to apologize to each and every one of them. Just a broken guy, got a few screws loose I guess. Never really knew it until now." The official tried to talk him into landing the plane, but it seems he did not want to. "I don’t know man," he said. "I don’t know. I don’t want to. I was kind of hoping that was gonna be it."

Since the incident, #SeaTac has been a topic of discussion on Twitter because of the possible mental health issues exhibited by Russell and some hypocrisy in the situation.

The man who stole an airplane at #SeaTac wasn’t a terrorist and this wasn’t entertainment for everyone on social media. This was a guy down on his luck, with mental health issues or depression, who took his own life. May he rest in peace.

— Eugene Gu, MD (@eugenegu) August 11, 2018

This whole situation at #SeaTac actually makes me sad. Listening to the transmission to aircraft control is really disheartening. Before you hop on here and make jokes listen to the transmissions, very sad situation.

— maxwell (@KrispyKalamari) August 11, 2018

The #SeaTac situation is just so sad. A good time to remind people suffering from mental health issues to reach out to family, friends and professionals. Most of us suffer more than we need to by going it alone. Find somebody to lean on. Seek new perspectives. You’re never alone.

— danny o’documentary (@dannyodwyer) August 11, 2018

You know what's HILARIOUS about this #SeaTac situation? If the plane-thief's name was Amir they'd have shot him the FUCK out of the sky by now. Instead we're just laughing along! hahahoho a man stole a FUCKING PLANE.
It's like y'all forgot the damn #NEVERFORGET hashtag

— Amir Talai 🐳 (@AmirTalai) August 11, 2018

Wait my man walked up and just stole a plane.......but I can't get on a flight with more than 3oz of water?? What's really going on? #SeaTac

— …And I’m A Family Man (@_stuckey) August 11, 2018

As horrible as this is, I have to say this: an aircraft mech pulled off a barrell roll in a twin engine turbo prop commuter plane. Speaking as someone in the industry, THAT is impressive. RIP, Rich...you lived the dream. #SeaTac

— Mike Keleher (@Hexfoliation) August 11, 2018

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