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|    alt.airports    |    Just one step above a dirty bus station    |    8,692 messages    |
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|    Message 8,535 of 8,692    |
|    David Fritz to All    |
|    The FBI is still searching for a fugitiv    |
|    07 Apr 18 04:56:09    |
      XPost: alt.politics.org.fbi, miami.general, rec.travel.air       XPost: sac.politics       From: david.fritz@vzw.com              When Valujet Flight 592 ascended for the last time in 1996, it was       supposed to be for a routine, hour-and-a-half-long trip from Miami       International Airport to Atlanta.              Seven minutes after takeoff, however, flight captain Candalyn Kubeck       radioed a troubling message: There had been a strange sound heard on the       plane, and now the pilots were experiencing electrical problems.              “We’re losing everything,” Kubeck said, seconds later. “We need, we need       to go back to Miami.”              In the background were shouts of “fire, fire, fire, fire” and “We’re on       fire! We’re on fire!”              Kubeck and her co-pilot managed to turn the aircraft back toward Miami,       but it was too late. In the cargo hold a devastating blaze had erupted,       filling the cabin and cockpit of the DC-9 with thick smoke and flames that       were hot enough to melt aluminum. The plane careened downward, tilted to       the right, on a final, uncontrolled descent.              At 2:13 p.m. on May 11, 1996 — less than 10 minutes after takeoff —       Valujet Flight 592 slammed into the murky waters of the Florida       Everglades, killing all 110 people on board. The impact was at once       devastating and curious: A witness in a sightseeing plane would later tell       investigators the jet seemed to vanish once it struck the wetlands,       creating a deep crater in the muck and saw grass.              Crash debris haunted investigators for months as they recovered fragments       of both plane and passengers from the “River of Grass.” To this day, no       complete body of any of the passengers has ever been found.              “It just went to pieces,” Jacqueline Fruge, a special agent with the FBI’s       Miami office, said in a statement Thursday.              The devastating crash prefaced the financial demise of one of the       country’s low-cost carriers.              The National Transportation Safety Board spent more than a year working up       an accident report that ruled the crash had been caused primarily by a       contractor’s mishandling of the packaging and shipment of oxygen       generators in the cargo hold.              The oxygen generators had been loaded without the proper safety caps,       causing them to ignite in the cargo hold and trigger the deadly fire, the       report said.              Investigators identified three employees of SabreTech, the maintenance       contractor for Valujet at the time, who had a role in mishandling the       oxygen generators, according to the FBI. Two of those employees were       criminally charged but later acquitted.              However, the third SabreTech employee, mechanic Mauro Ociel Valenzuela-       Reyes, fled sometime before his trial in 2000. He had been charged the       year before with making false statements to the Federal Aviation       Administration and the Transportation Department, as well as causing the       transportation of hazardous materials.              Now, more than two decades after one of the deadliest aviation disasters       in Florida history, the FBI is renewing its search for Valenzuela-Reyes,       the last employee wanted in connection with the Valujet crash.              The FBI announced Thursday it was offering a $10,000 reward for       information leading to the capture of Valenzuela-Reyes. The agency also       released age-progressed images of what the mechanic might look like today       at 48 years old.              He is described as a 170-pound Hispanic male with black hair and brown       eyes and stands anywhere from 5-foot-10 to 6 feet tall. FBI investigators       said they suspect Valenzuela-Reyes of living under a false identity in       Chile or elsewhere in South America. He also has ties to Georgia, the       agency said.              Anyone with information on Valenzuela-Reyes is asked to contact their       local FBI office.              An FBI spokesman did not respond to questions sent by email or grant an       interview request Friday, referring to the statement the agency had       released the day before.              Fruge, who has worked for the FBI for 29 years and has been the primary       agent on the Valujet case since it began, said in the statement that       locating Valenzuela-Reyes would bring “closure” in one of Florida’s       deadliest airline crashes.              “We’ve tried over the years to find him,” Fruge said. “It bothers me. I’ve       lived and breathed it for many, many years.”              https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/retropolis/wp/2018/04/06/the-fbi-is-       still-searching-for-a-fugitive-mechanic-involved-in-a-horrific-1996-       valujet-crash/?utm_term=.fed737dc4874              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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