Posted on 09/28/2004 8:36:48 PM PDT by WKB
The Bermuda triangle claims more victims.
Man, that has got to hurt real bad.
No way that is real!!!!!!!!
ROFL
Maybe they landed on an island that used to exist.
Prayers for the family and their survivors. May God lead us to them if any are still alive...
MS PING
Prayer request
pVVnd
I thought that at first also
But,
she never braces herself for the fall.
She isn't looking at where she is going when she starts the fall.
if you look at the metal on the side of the hole you can see her reflection as she passes.
If this is fake, they did a dam good job of it.
Please post your replies to WKB
WKB, my prayers for this family. May God lead the authorities to them.
Blessings,
trussell
If you want on/off my prayer ping list, please let me know. All requests happily honored.
I join in prayer for this family and their loved ones!
PENSACOLA, Fla. He said he didn't know where he was going -- and now, nobody knows where he is.
A Florida Panhandle man and his family haven't been seen in nearly two weeks, since he hopped in his plane to escape Hurricane Ivan.
Escambia County's sheriff says "everything just vanished" and that he's "wide open" in trying to find Kevin Bomback and family.
The plane was last heard from 13 days ago, while it was about 40 miles southeast of Jackson, Mississippi.
An airport worker who had fueled the plane says Bomback told him he didn't know where he was going -- just that he wanted to get ahead of the storm.
The worker wasn't sure whether Bomback's wife and two kids were also aboard.
Relatives in Houston reported the family missing a few days ago.
Their car still sits outside the Atmore Flying Center, where the departed in Kevin Bomback's Cessna.
Kevin Bomback recently received his pilots license and had not insured his plane. His flight plan was not filed.
The Escambia County Sheriff's Department in Florida is in charge of the search. The Air Force Rescue Coordination Team is also involved.
A search is still on going for a missing family of four, who may have been on an airplane that disappeared, as the owner of the plane, tried to escape Hurricane Ivan.
The Civil Air Patrol says the airplane, a twin engine cessana, took off from Atmore, Alabama about midnight the 14th of September and was last heard from just north of Magee, Mississippi the morning of the 15th of September, about 2:49 A.M.
The plane is a push pull aircraft, one propeller pulling, the other pushing. The missing plane is blue and white. Kevin Bomback, his wife Sherri, and their two children, Alishia, 17, and Brent 12, were believed to be aboard the aircraft, although the man who fueled the airplane before take off said he couldn't be sure because it was too dark to see in the cabin. When Bomback left in the Cessana, he was asked where he was going, and he said he did not know, he was just getting out ahead of the storm.
At the Magee Airport, Margaret Prine is the manager. A low flying airplane awakened her, she says, about 1 A.M., the morning of the storm, which would have been the 16th, instead of the 15th. She says however, the civil air patrol believes the airplane she heard, is the one they are searching for."It was not in trouble. I could hear just normal flying and he went up, no spitting or sputtering, nothing wrong with the engine. So you believe that is the airplane they are lookin for? The cap seems to believe thats the one they are looking for."
The Sheriff of Simpson County, Kenneth Lewis, says he is not sure there is a missing airplane in his county."To be honest with you, I am not sure if we have an airplane down or not, due to the difference in times of the reports. The woods in the area where the plane is believed to be missing are so dense, you cannot see the ground from the air. It may take a long time to find the aircraft, if indeed it is in these woods."
Bombeck, the owner of the plane is a Federal Express mechanic in New Orleans. The man did not file a flight plan, and did not have a working transponder. The civil air patrol says that is the reason it took so long to launch a search, because it was not known he was missing until after the storm, when he didn't show up for work. His brother believes foul play is involved, but doesn't say why.
The Civil Air Patrol called us late Tueday afternoon to say they have launched another airplane to check on something of interest. They would not say where, or what they found.
Bomback never returned to work in New Orleans, where he's an aircraft mechanic for Federal Express.
lol!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.