Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Ben Charles Padilla

Encyclopedia : B : BE : BEN : Ben Charles Padilla


Ben Charles Padilla
Enlarge
Ben Charles Padilla

Ben Charles Padilla (born 1952 in Pensacola, Florida) is a small aircraft pilot, and a jet aircraft mechanic, who was lost on May 25 of 2003 in the African country of Angola.

Padilla was in Angola because an aircraft leasing company had sent him there to participate as an in-flight mechanic during a ferry flight of a Boeing 727 aircraft to the company's headquarters. The plane took off without permission from Quatro de Fevereiro Airport, in Luanda, and Padilla has not been seen since. His disappearance sparked many rumors, most of them tying it with terrorism. It also caused a world-wide search by both the FBI and the CIA. Padilla is not believed to have had any previous contacts with the people who flew the airplane off.

On January 6 2004, his siblings declared on television that they have received several calls from around the world offering tips to the whereabouts of the jet-liner, which used to fly for American Airlines with the registration N844AA, one of them placing it in Lebanon. However, none of the calls have disclosed sightings of Padilla himself.

After the crash of UTA Flight 141, on December 25 2003, rumors spread that the jet-liner used for that flight could in fact, be the aircraft that Padilla was supposed to be flying in when his (and the plane's) mysterious disappearance occurred. The rumor turned out to be unfounded.

The aircraft was seen to be swaying from side to side down the taxiways and indeed along the runway as the aircraft took off, this led to theories - after it was reported a black cleaner had been seen to board (but not deboarding) - that Padilla was struggling with this man for control over the aircraft and eventually he was overpowered.

This incident appears to be part of the inspiration/background for the novel 'By Order of the President' (C) 2004 by W.E.B. Griffin, in which a Boeing 727 plane is stolen from the same airport in Luanda on 25 May 2005 with also one crew aboard who ultimately went missing.

External link

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: