Pacific Search for Clues Underway
By JEFF WILSON Associated Press Writer
OXNARD, Calif. (AP) - Investigators trying to learn why an Alaska Airlines jet with 88 people plunged into the Pacific said today they have recovered four bodies and heard ``pinging'' from the ocean, apparently from the aircraft's flight recorders.
Officials hope data from the so-called ``black boxes'' could provide key clues to Monday's crash of the MD-83 jetliner, including whether the airliner was brought down because of problems with a device that's supposed to stabilize the plane.
``That is obviously a prime lead and a prime finding that will be followed,'' said Coast Guard Vice Adm. Tom Collins. The position of the pinging was pinpointed by a Navy underwater demolition team helping with the search, he said.
No survivors aboard Flight 261 have been found. Collins said the bodies recovered were those of an infant, two women and a man.
``This is still a search for human life. The decision to stop searching is mine, mine to make, and it's a difficult one,'' Collins said during a news conference.
Meanwhile, Coast Guard ships, Navy vessels and a private boat combed the choppy sea about 10 miles off the Southern California coast for additional debris that could help explain the crash.
Monday night, commercial squid boats used nets to haul in grim reminders of lives lost: a tennis shoe, a stuffed animal and a number of small souvenirs from Mexico. A stench of jet fuel hung in the air as the nets were pulled to the surface.
The flight en route from Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, to San Francisco and Seattle hit the water 4:36 p.m. Monday in what a witness described as a nose dive. The weather was clear at the time.
Moments prior, one of the two pilots radioed that he was having trouble with ``stabilizer trim'' and asked to be diverted to Los Angeles for an emergency landing, airline spokesman Jack Evans said.
The plane fell 17,000 feet before being lost from radar screens, officials said. It crashed in water 300 feet to 750 feet deep.
The flight was normal until the crew reported control problems, said a source with close knowledge of the investigation, speaking on condition of anonymity. Radar showed the plane, an MD-83, plummeting toward the sea shortly afterward.
On MD-80 series airplanes, the horizontal stabilizer looks like a small wing mounted on top of the tail. The stabilizer, which includes panels that pitch the nose up and down, is brought into balance, or ``trimmed,'' from the cockpit.
If a plane loses its horizontal stabilizer, there is no way to keep the nose pointed to the proper angle, and the aircraft will begin an uncontrollable dive.
Evans said the plane had no previous stabilizer problems, and Federal Aviation Administration spokesman John Clabes said it had never been in an accident.
A National Park Service ranger on Anacapa Island, off the coast of Oxnard, saw the airliner go down and was first to report it, said spokeswoman Susan Smith at the Channel Islands National Park headquarters.
``From his observation it was nose first,'' Smith said.
Tony Alfieri, owner of a squid fishing boat, told the Los Angeles Times that he and his crew ``heard a big boom and we saw a big splash, I mean like 200 feet in the air. . .We thought, 'Oh my God, this is not a good deal.' ''
There were 83 passengers and five crew members aboard, Evans said. Thirty-two were bound for San Francisco, 47 for Seattle, three were continuing on to Eugene, Ore., and one to Fairbanks, Alaska. The two pilots were based in Los Angeles and the three flight attendants were based in Seattle.
The passengers included three airline employees, four employees of sister airline Horizon and 23 relatives or friends of the employees.
Near the entrance of Port Hueneme, where the search effort was based, a 7-foot wooden cross festooned with flowers was erected today. A white plastic angel sat at the base with a candle blowing in a jar.
Some local residents bowed their heads in prayer. From the site they could see search aircraft patroling offshore above the crash area.
``They just stand for a while with their own thoughts. It's tragic,'' said Neal Silverman, 47, who moved into his beach house just a week ago.
Both pilots were Alaska Airlines veterans. Capt. Ted Thompson, 53, was hired Aug. 16, 1982, and had 10,400 flying hours with the company. First Officer William Tansky, 57, was hired July 17, 1985, and had 8,047 flying hours with the Seattle-based airline.
The plane itself was built by McDonnell Douglas, now part of Boeing, and delivered to Alaska Airlines in 1992, said John Thom, a spokesman for Boeing's Douglas aircraft unit.
Evans said the plane was serviced Sunday, went through a low-level maintenance check on Jan. 11 and had a more thorough routine check last January.
An FAA service difficulty report for the plane includes 44 incidents dating to 1992, most of them dealing with emergency lights and problems with sliding windows not opening.
In 1995, an engine failed and the plane landed without incident, the report said. The engine was replaced.
Alaska Airlines, which has the image of an Eskimo painted on the tails of its planes, serves more than 40 cities in Alaska, Canada, Mexico and five Western states.
It had two fatal accidents in the 1970s, both in Alaska.
The MD-80 series is a twin-jet version of the more widely known DC-9, with a single aisle and an engine on each side of the tail. It went into service in 1980 and of the 1,167 series planes delivered, Boeing reported last year, only nine had been lost in accidents.
Alaska Airlines has been the subject of an Oakland, Calif., federal grand jury investigation over maintenance and repair records for some MD-80s in the past year.
A Federal Aviation Administration report found two MD-80s that made 840 flights in late 1998 and early 1999 on which records were falsified. Because of the altered records, the aircraft were considered to be in ``unairworthy condition,'' FAA documents said.
Federal prosecutors declined to comment on the probe, citing grand jury secrecy rules. Evans said at the time that the airline was consistently told by federal investigators that airplane safety was not in question and that the inquiries were limited to record keeping.
Referring to that probe, John Kelly, chairman and CEO of Alaska Airlines, said today on CBS-TV's ``The Early Show'' that the plane involved in the crash ``was the subject of no investigation whatsoever.''
Before this week, the most recent fatal crash in the United States involving an MD-80 series jet was last summer's American Airlines accident in Little Rock, Ark. Eleven people died and 110 were injured when an MD-82 trying to land in a storm ran off a runway, broke apart and caught fire.
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