Alaska Flight 261 bound for Seattle crashes into the Pacific Ocean on (2024)

  • Home
    • This Week Then
    • Today in Washington History
    • New This Week
    • Upcoming Event
  • Explore
    • About Washington
    • Timeline
    • Slideshows
    • Roll of Honor
    • Book Reviews
    • Podcasts
  • Tours
  • Education
    • In the Classroom
    • History Day
    • Curriculum Materials
  • About
    • About
    • Donors
    • Publications
    • Contact
    • Commissioned Work
    • Work with Us
  • Events

Previous Entry in Timeline

Alaska Flight 261 bound for Seattle crashes into the Pacific Ocean on January 31, 2000.

  • By Chris Goodman and Priscilla Long
  • Posted 1/28/2001
  • HistoryLink.org Essay 2958
See Additional Media

On January 31, 2000, Alaska Airlines Flight 261, bound for Seattle, plunges into the Pacific Ocean 40 miles northwest of Los Angeles, off the coast of California, killing all 88 passengers and crew. The flight originated in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, and was bound for Seattle with an intermediate stop in San Francisco. Forty-seven of the passengers were headed to Seattle and three of the crew member were based in Seattle. Most of the other victims were bound for San Francisco. Captain Ted Thompson and First Officer William Tansky struggle to control the plane for at least a half an hour, while at times communicating via radio with Alaska Airlines maintenance center in Seattle, in an attempt to troubleshoot control problems with the McDonnell Douglas MD-83.

Investigation of the crash quickly focused issues surrounding the two-foot-long jackscrew -- part of a system that drives adjustments to the horizontal stabilizer, which in turn controls the pitch, or up-and-down orientation, of the aircraft. While in flight, the MD-83 experienced a sudden, sharp dive. It was suspected that there was a problem with the horizontal stabilizer "trim." After temporarily leveling out, pilots again lost control as they prepared the plane for an emergency landing at Los Angeles International Airport. After this change in "configuration," the plane entered an uncontrolled nosedive from 17,000 feet.

In December 2002, the National Transportation Safety Board attributed the crash to lack of grease on the jackscrew. Insufficient lubrication of the jackscrew led to the stripping of the screw threads, causing the plane’s horizontal stabilizer to jam in a position that forced the plane into a drastic nose-down orientation. The board blamed both the airline for its maintenance practices and the Federal Aviation Administration for its failure to adequately oversee the carrier. The board also concluded that a contributing factor was the lack of a fail-safe mechanism to protect the MD-80 from a catastrophic loss of the jackscrew.

The U.S. Attorney's Office for Northern California investigated claims of fraudulent record-keeping and cover-up at an Alaskan Airlines maintenance center in Oakland, where Flight 261 was last serviced before the crash, but announced in August 2003 that it would not file any criminal charges.

Meanwhile, the airline and The Boeing Company (which acquired the McDonnell Corporation Corp. in 1997) settled 87 of 88 wrongful death lawsuits stemming from the crash. Financial details were sealed from public view, but lawyers said the settlements were among the largest ever in an air disaster, in part because of the safety board’s strongly worded report assigning blame, and partly because of the nature of the crash itself. Relatives of the victims were granted the right to receive so-called pre-impact compensation, covering the emotional as well as the physical injuries the passengers encountered as the plane nose-dived into the ocean. Negotiators pointed out that the passengers experienced two separate freefalls, the first lasting 80 seconds and the final one lasting 90 seconds.

As of August 2004, only one of the suits, brought on behalf of passenger Joan Smith, 53, of Burlingame, California, remained pending.

Flight recorder data showed that Flight 261 crashed into the Pacific Ocean at 4:22 p.m., at a speed of more than 200 miles per hour.

Four years after the crash, a memorial (a sculpture of dolphins leaping around a sundial, financed by contributions from Alaska Airlines and from families and friends of the victims) was placed on the beach at Port Hueneme, California, opposite the spot where the plane went down 20 miles offshore.

Beginning in 2001, surviving family members of the Pearson, Barnett, and Clemetson families, as well as Queen Anne neighbors, began raising funds to renovate a nearby park, Soundview Terrace, to be an active memorial and to recognize the park's importance to their six children during their lifetimes. The park, located at 11th Avenue W and W Wheeler Street, opened on April 27, 2003, as Soundview Terrace/Rachel's Playground. The Pearson children's grandfather, Ralph Pearson, coined the name in honor of Rachel Pearson's near-daily visits to the tiny park during her brief lifetime.

Among the Washington residents killed on Flight 261 were:

  • Stanford Poll, 59, Mercer Island, Washington, former owner of J&M Cafe and Blue Moon tavern in Seattle;
  • Dr. David Clemetson, 40 (a Burien physician);
  • Carolyn Clemetson, 31;
  • Miles Clemetson, 6;
  • Spencer Clemetson (infant son of Carolyn Clemetson);
  • Coriander Barnett-Clemetson, 8;
  • Blake Barnett-Clemetson, 6 (Cori and Blake were the daughters of Dr. Claire Barnett);
  • Tom Stockley (wine columnist for The Seattle Times);
  • Margaret Stockley;
  • Rodney Pearson, 45 (vice president of operations for Six Degrees restaurants);
  • Sarah Pearson (Alaska Airlines flight attendant);
  • Rachel Pearson, 6;
  • Grace Pearson (infant daughter of Sarah Pearson);
  • Abigail Busche, 26;
  • Ryan Busche, 28;
  • Allison Shanks, 33 (Alaska Airlines flight attendant);
  • Janice Stokes
  • Craig Pulanco, (flight attendant who had changed his name from Craig Gruhl);
  • Paul Pulanco, (a director of the Northwest AIDS Foundation);
  • Meghann Hall, 19, Enumclaw;
  • Ryan Sparks, 20, Enumclaw;
  • Rachel Janosik (Horizon Air employee), 20, Enumclaw;
  • Avinesh Amit Deo, 23;
  • Avinash "A.V." Prasad, 19;
  • Anjesh Prasad, 19 (Avinesh, Avinash, and Anjesh were cousins, all born in Fiji, who had gone to Mexico to celebrate Avinesh's graduation from ITT Technical Institute);
  • Monte Lane Donaldson (a freelance DJ, engaged to marry Colleen Rose Whorley);
  • Colleen Rose Whorley, (art director at Microsoft, engaged to marry Monte Donaldson);
  • Don Shaw, 63 (retired elementary school principal in the Snohomish School District);
  • Robert Thorgrimson, 63 (grandson of a founding partner in the Preston, Gates & Ellis law firm based in Seattle), Poulsbo, Washington;
  • Lorna Thorgrimson, 53, (sold furniture at the Silverdale Bon Marche), Poulsbo, Washington;
  • Deborah Penna (Cornish College art student);
  • Michael Bernard;
  • James Ryan (Alaska Airlines flight attendant), Redmond, Washington;
  • Terry Ryan, Redmond Washington
  • Barbara Ryan, Redmond, Washington;
  • Bradford Ryan, Redmond, Washington;
  • Russell Ing;
  • Linda Knight, 51;
  • Joe Knight, 54 (the Knights were co-pastors at The Rock Church in Monroe, Washington);
  • Charlene Sipe;
  • Harry Stasinos (insurance agent who lived with Charlene Sipe);
  • Sherry Christiansen (Horizon Air Employee) Federal Way, Washington;
  • Stacey Schuyler (Horizon Air Employee), Milton, Washington;
  • Kristin Mills (Flight Attendant);
  • Donald Shaw, Shelton, Washington;
  • Larence Baldridge.
Sources:

"Board Meeting: Loss of Control and Impact with Pacific Ocean, Alaska Airlines Flight 261, McDonnell Douglas MD-83, N963AS, about 2.7 miles north of Anacapa Island, California, January 31, 2000," National Transportation Safety Board website accessed January 2, 2015 (http://www.ntsb.gov/publictn/2002/AAR0201.htm); "88 Die in Seattle-bound Jet; Speculation Focuses on Tail," The Seattle Times, February 1, 2000, p. A-1; "Alaska Airlines Flight Crashes," Seattle Post-Intelligencer, January 31, 2000 (http://seattlep-i.com); "The Faces of Flight 261's Victims," Ibid., February 1, 2000; "Passenger List Released," Ibid., February 1, 2000; "Grief, Worry at Sea-Tac as Loved Ones Wait," Ibid., February 1, 2000; Paul Nyhan, "No Criminal Charges Filed in Alaska Airlines Crash," Ibid., August 12, 2003; David Dravets, "All But One Suit Settled in Flight 261 Crash," Ibid., July 4, 2003; "Board of Park Commissioners Meeting Minutes, May 8, 2003," Seattle Parks and Recreation website accessed January 2, 2015 (http://www.seattle.gov/Documents/Departments/ParksAndRecreation/Minutes/2003/05-08-03.pdf).
Note: This essay was updated by Cassandra Tate on August 10, 2004, updated again on June 6, 2006, and corrected on January 31, 2011, and source listings were updated on January 2, 2015.

Related Topics

Aviation

Calamities

< Previous Entry in Timeline

Next Entry in Timeline >

Licensing: This essay is licensed under a Creative Commons license that encourages reproduction with attribution. Credit should be given to both HistoryLink.org and to the author, and sources must be included with any reproduction. Click the icon for more info. Please note that this Creative Commons license applies to text only, and not to images. For more information regarding individual photos or images, please contact the source noted in the image credit.
Alaska Flight 261 bound for Seattle crashes into the Pacific Ocean on (1)
Major Support for HistoryLink.org Provided By: The State of Washington | Patsy Bullitt Collins | Paul G. Allen Family Foundation | Museum Of History & Industry | 4Culture (King County Lodging Tax Revenue) | City of Seattle | City of Bellevue | City of Tacoma | King County | The Peach Foundation | Microsoft Corporation, Other Public and Private Sponsors and Visitors Like You
Alaska Flight 261 bound for Seattle crashes into the Pacific Ocean on (2024)
Top Articles
2024-2025 Residency Application Cycle: Complete IMG Timeline and Checklist | Match A Resident
Gigante
Spasa Parish
Rentals for rent in Maastricht
159R Bus Schedule Pdf
Sallisaw Bin Store
Black Adam Showtimes Near Maya Cinemas Delano
Www.myschedule.kp.org
Ascension St. Vincent's Lung Institute - Riverside
Understanding British Money: What's a Quid? A Shilling?
Xenia Canary Dragon Age Origins
Momokun Leaked Controversy - Champion Magazine - Online Magazine
Maine Coon Craigslist
‘An affront to the memories of British sailors’: the lies that sank Hollywood’s sub thriller U-571
Tyreek Hill admits some regrets but calls for officer who restrained him to be fired | CNN
Haverhill, MA Obituaries | Driscoll Funeral Home and Cremation Service
Rogers Breece Obituaries
Ems Isd Skyward Family Access
Elektrische Arbeit W (Kilowattstunden kWh Strompreis Berechnen Berechnung)
Omni Id Portal Waconia
Kellifans.com
Banned in NYC: Airbnb One Year Later
Four-Legged Friday: Meet Tuscaloosa's Adoptable All-Stars Cub & Pickle
Model Center Jasmin
Ice Dodo Unblocked 76
Is Slatt Offensive
Labcorp Locations Near Me
Storm Prediction Center Convective Outlook
Experience the Convenience of Po Box 790010 St Louis Mo
Fungal Symbiote Terraria
modelo julia - PLAYBOARD
Abby's Caribbean Cafe
Joanna Gaines Reveals Who Bought the 'Fixer Upper' Lake House and Her Favorite Features of the Milestone Project
Tri-State Dog Racing Results
Navy Qrs Supervisor Answers
Trade Chart Dave Richard
Lincoln Financial Field Section 110
Free Stuff Craigslist Roanoke Va
Stellaris Resolution
Wi Dept Of Regulation & Licensing
Pick N Pull Near Me [Locator Map + Guide + FAQ]
Crystal Westbrooks Nipple
Ice Hockey Dboard
Über 60 Prozent Rabatt auf E-Bikes: Aldi reduziert sämtliche Pedelecs stark im Preis - nur noch für kurze Zeit
Wie blocke ich einen Bot aus Boardman/USA - sellerforum.de
Infinity Pool Showtimes Near Maya Cinemas Bakersfield
Hooda Math—Games, Features, and Benefits — Mashup Math
Dermpathdiagnostics Com Pay Invoice
How To Use Price Chopper Points At Quiktrip
Maria Butina Bikini
Busted Newspaper Zapata Tx
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Golda Nolan II

Last Updated:

Views: 5944

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (78 voted)

Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Golda Nolan II

Birthday: 1998-05-14

Address: Suite 369 9754 Roberts Pines, West Benitaburgh, NM 69180-7958

Phone: +522993866487

Job: Sales Executive

Hobby: Worldbuilding, Shopping, Quilting, Cooking, Homebrewing, Leather crafting, Pet

Introduction: My name is Golda Nolan II, I am a thoughtful, clever, cute, jolly, brave, powerful, splendid person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.