An airport worker who knew how to take off but not land on Saturday stole a small airplane and threatened to crash it into a Walmart, circling for five hours over unnerved Mississippians before ending the flight safely in a soybean field where police arrested him.
Cory Wayne Patterson, 29, was uninjured after the rough landing shortly after posting a goodbye message to his parents and sister on Facebook, authorities told a news conference.
The message said he “never actually wanted to hurt anyone.”
Photo: AP
After an anxious morning of watching the plane’s meandering path overhead, Tupelo Mayor Todd Jordan called the resolution “the best case scenario.”
No one was injured.
Patterson was employed fueling planes at Tupelo Regional Airport, giving him access to the twin-engine Beechcraft King Air C90A, Tupelo Police Department Chief John Quaka said.
It was not immediately known why, shortly after 5am, the 10-year Tupelo Aviation employee took off in the fully fueled plane.
Fifteen minutes later, Patterson called a Lee County 911 dispatcher to say he planned to crash the plane into a Tupelo Walmart, Quaka said.
Officers evacuated people from the Walmart and a nearby convenience store.
“This is more likely a crime of opportunity,” said Quaka, adding that the airport’s tower is not staffed until 6am.
Police negotiators were able to make contact during the flight and convince Patterson to land, but he did not know how to.
He was coached by a private pilot into nearly landing at the Tupelo airport, but he aborted the attempt at the last minute and resumed the flight, authorities said.
A negotiator re-established contact at about 10am, and learned that Patterson had landed in a field and was uninjured, Quaka said.
The plane landed near Ripley, Mississippi, about 140km southeast of Memphis, Tennessee, and about 70km northwest of Tupelo.
“There’s damage, but believe it or not, the aircraft is intact,” Quaka told reporters.
Patterson, whose Facebook page said he is from Shannon, was charged with grand larceny and making terroristic threats.
Quaka said federal authorities could also bring charges.
Police said that Patterson is not believed to be a licensed pilot, but has some flight instruction.
Patterson contacted family members during the flight, Jordan said, adding that he hopes Patterson “will get the help he needs.”
“Sorry everyone. Never wanted to actually hurt anyone. I love my parents and sister this isn’t your fault. Goodbye,” Patterson wrote on Facebook at about 9:30am.
Peter Goelz, former managing director at the National Transportation Safety Board, said the vulnerability of small airports, which cater to small planes and corporate jets, has worried security experts for years.
“If you’ve got a trained pilot who can get in and grab a business jet, you’ve got a pretty lethal weapon there,” he said.
Ripley resident Roxanne Ward said she had been tracking the plane online and went to her father-in-law’s house with plans to go into the basement for safety. She said she heard the thud as the plane hit the ground on her father-in-law’s property.
She and others got onto four-wheelers to ride to it.
“As soon as it crashed, police were there and waiting,” said Ward, who watched from a distance. “Police coaxed him out. They yelled at him: ‘Arms in the air.’”
She said the pilot got out of the plane without resisting police.
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