Suspected Seattle airplane thief was
adventurer, bakery owner
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[August 13, 2018]
By Jon Herskovitz
(Reuters) - The airline worker who stole an
empty airplane from a Seattle airport on a flight that ended in his
death once ran a bakery with his wife and enjoyed the benefits that came
with his job to travel the world, social media posts showed.
Richard Russell, who liked to be called Beebo, was a 29-year-old man
living in Sumner, Washington, who was born in Key West, Florida, and
moved to Wasilla, Alaska, when he was 7 years old, according to a Web
page he set up for a college communications class.
He has not been officially named by authorities, but his family and
multiple news media outlets have reported his identity.
Russell worked for Horizon Airlines, a sister carrier of Alaska Airlines
[ALKAIR.UL], as a ground service agent who helped baggage handlers and
was part of Horizon's tow team, which moved planes around on the tarmac.
It was a job that gave him the perk of "being able to fly to Alaska at
my leisure," he wrote on the page.
In a video posted on YouTube last December, Russell shows luggage coming
off and being loaded onto aircraft, and describes what the life of a
ground service agent can entail.
"That means I lift a lot of bags, like a lot of bags, so many bags," he
says, adding, "it allows me to do some pretty cool things, too."
There are then shots of trips he took, including flying over Alaskan
fjords, visiting lavender fields in France, touring in Yucatan, Mexico,
and attending a hurling match in Dublin, Ireland.
"It evens out in the end," he says to end the video.
There was no mention in the social media posts of studying to become a
pilot but in some posts he spoke of his Christian religious faith and
the possibility of joining the military.
On a SoundCloud site, Russell interviews fellow ground service agents,
asking them questions that include: "What was one of your best travel
experiences using your flight benefits?"
Authorities say he commandeered an empty Bombardier Q400, 107-foot
(32.61 m) long turboprop aircraft on Friday night from a maintenance
area at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. He flew for about an hour,
often erratically with attempts at aerial stunts, before crashing on
Ketron Island in Puget Sound, about 25 miles (40 km) to the southwest.
He appeared to have acted alone and was suicidal, according to the local
sheriff's department.
His family members said in a statement they were stunned and
heartbroken.
"It may seem difficult for those watching at home to believe, but Beebo
was a warm, compassionate man," the statement said.
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Richard Russell, who liked to be called Beebo, is seen in an undated
photograph from a video he produced for his Youtube channel,
obtained August 11, 2018. Youtube/Handout via REUTERS
Russell's social media posts often showed him on adventures with his
wife, who he said he met in Oregon in 2010.
"We were married one year later, and one month after that we opened
a bakery which we successfully ran for 3 years," he wrote on his Web
page. "We consider ourselves bakery connoisseurs and have to try a
new one every place we go."
The couple later moved to Washington state, where he got a job with
Horizon. His wife could not immediately be reached for comment.
The Seattle Times quoted Rick Christenson, an operational supervisor
with the airline who retired in May, as saying Russell was a
well-liked, quiet person.
In his final moments captured by partial recordings of his
conversations with air traffic controllers that were published
online by Broadcastify.com, Russell spoke calmly and said he was
sorry to disappoint people who cared about him and described himself
as a "broken guy".
"Got a few screws loose, I guess," he is heard saying in the
recording. "Never really knew it until now."
(Reporting by Jon Herskovitz; Additional reporting by Alex
Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles; Editing by Jonathan Oatis and Richard
Borsuk)
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