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  • Updated
    1
    May
    2013
    1:08pm, EDT

    'We're all devastated': Americans killed in 747 crash mourned

    Family members in Michigan mourn the loss of crew members killed in cargo plane crash near Bagram Airfield in Afghanistan. WDIV's Chauncy Glover reports.

    By Corey Williams, Jeff Karoub and Joan Lowry, The Associated Press

    Jamie Brokaw was an experienced navigator who was no stranger to dangerous flying situations and had the skills to stay cool in the face of danger, according to close friend Chris Connerton.

    "He was a very good person and very smart person," Connerton told The Associated Press by telephone from Rochester, Minn.

    Brokaw, 33, of Monroe, Mich., was among seven Americans killed Monday when their National Air Cargo plane crashed near an Air Force base in Afghanistan. Six of the victims were from Michigan and a seventh was from Kentucky, said Shirley Kaufman, National Air Cargo vice president.

    Connerton said Brokaw was a key reason he was able to make it through flight school in Jacksonville, Fla., where they met.

    Connerton also described a harrowing flight two years ago from Toledo, Ohio, to an international flight expo in Lakeland, Fla. Connerton said ice had built up on the plane to the point that he could no longer get it to climb.

    "If it wasn't for Jamie's navigation and know-how ... we wouldn't have made it," Connerton said.

    Killed along with Brokaw in the Afghanistan crash were Gary Stockdale, 51, of Romulus, Mich.; pilots Brad Hasler, 34, of Trenton, Mich., and Jeremy Lipka, 37, of Brooklyn, Mich.; first officer Rinku Summan, 32, of Canton, Mich.; loadmaster Michael Sheets, 36, of Ypsilanti, Mich.; and maintenance crewman Timothy Garrett, 51, of Louisville, Ky.

    Building model planes and working on real ones comprised Stockdale's passion, filling the family's basement with models in his youth, jumping into aviation as a career at age 16 — and later working at two Detroit-area airports.

    Stockdale also knew the dangers of flying, his older brother said Tuesday.

    "He always said it was dangerous," said Glenn Stockdale, 55. "He would always say, 'You either will die in a car crash or a ball of flame in a plane.'"

    AP / Courtesy Stockdale Family

    Gary Stockdale, 51, of Romulus, Mich., was killed in a cargo plane crash on Monday.

    Lipka had flown in Iraq as well as Afghanistan and had close calls before, said his stepfather, Dave Buttman.

    "There was risk there all the time. He knew the risks. He volunteered to take the trips," Buttman told the Star Tribune of Minneapolis. "Basically, you're taking your chances flying in there and he was just happy to be one of the pilots to do it."

    The Dubai-bound Boeing 747-400 — operated by National Air Cargo — crashed just after takeoff Monday from Bagram Air Base around 11:20 a.m. local time, the National Transportation Safety Board said in a statement Tuesday.

    The accident site is within the perimeter of Bagram Air Base.

    The Taliban quickly claimed responsibility for downing the plane, but NATO said the claims were false and there was no sign of insurgent activity in the area at the time of the crash.

    The Afghanistan Ministry of Transportation and Commercial Aviation is leading the investigation. The NTSB is investigating the crash alongside the ministry. The team will be composed of three NTSB investigators, as well as representatives from the Federal Aviation Administration and Boeing, the NTSB said.

    Kaufman said the plane — owned by National Airlines, an Orlando, Fla.-based subsidiary of National Air Cargo — was carrying vehicles and other cargo.

    Elena Garrett, of Jeffersonville, Ind., just across the Ohio River from Louisville, said ex-husband Timothy Garrett would have turned 52 on Saturday. They have two daughters together, ages 11 and 12.

    "We're all devastated," Elena Garrett said about his death. "We were still best friends. He's the best father I've ever seen (and) ready to help anybody. He would give the shirt off his back for anybody."

    Bill Hasler said his family learned Monday morning that his brother, Brad, was one of the crash victims.

    "Brad was a wonderful father to two young children, a beloved husband to a wife who is expecting another child, a loving son, and the most loyal and supportive brother I could have ever asked for," Bill Hasler said in a statement. "His influence in the lives of all of us who loved him is immeasurable, and our grief is indescribable."

    National Airlines was based until recently at Michigan's Willow Run Airport, west of Detroit. It carries cargo both commercially and for the military, Kaufman said. She said the company employs about 225 people.

    Summan had worked 2½ years for National Air Cargo, said his wife, Rajnit Summan.

    Rajnit Summan said she last spoke to her husband Sunday.

    "I told him to be safe," she said.

    This story was originally published on Wed May 1, 2013 4:31 AM EDT

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    357 comments

    My condolences to the families. It appears to stall caused maybe by load shift but I am not the expert and will wait to see.

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    Explore related topics: afghanistan, michigan, kentucky, featured, bagram-air-base, updated, national-air-cargo
  • 20
    Nov
    2012
    5:21am, EST

    'Unimaginable' fear: Man jailed over collar bomb hoax on Australia girl

    Dean Lewins / EPA, file

    Detectives drive collar bomb suspect Paul Peters from Sydney International Airport in September 2011, after he was extradited from the U.S.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    A man who strapped a fake bomb around the neck of a Sydney schoolgirl and then fled to the United States was jailed for 13 and a half years on Tuesday after an Australian court ruled he had instilled unimaginable fear into his victim.

    The case sparked an international manhunt and led to a tense 10 hours for teenager Madeleine Pulver, 18, after the man broke into her family's luxury home in August 2011 and chained what he said was a bomb around her neck, leaving a note demanding money.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    After extensive tests, bomb technicians determined the box was harmless.

    Police in the United States arrested Paul Douglas Peters, 52, in Kentucky at his former wife’s home about two weeks after the incident by tracking him through email accounts. In September 2011 he was extradited to Australia.

    'Collar bomb' extortion case: Banker who fled to Kentucky pleads guilty

    Defense lawyers said Peters had suffered depression in the months before the attack and had no memory of his actions. Prosecutors said Peters had planned to target a neighbor of the Pulver family, and broke into the wrong house.

    A young woman in Sydney says a man wearing a ski mask strapped an explosive device to her neck. TODAY.com's Dara Brown reports.

    "He would have appreciated the enormity of what he was doing and the terrible effect and consequences of his actions on the victim," Sentencing District Court Judge Peter Zahra said. "The fear instilled can only be described as unimaginable."

    He sentenced Peters, who pleaded guilty to “aggravated break and enter”, to 13 years and six months in prison, with a minimum 10 years to be served before he can apply for parole.

    Before the attack, Peters was the CEP of Appen Butler Hill, a company that provides language and voice-recognition software and services.

    The legal ordeal is over for fake collar bomb victim Madeleine Pulver after her attacker, Paul Peters, pleaded guilty.

    Outside the court, Pulver said she was pleased Peters would not be able to hurt anyone else, and that the court acknowledged the impact of his crime on her family.

    "It was good to hear the judge acknowledge the trauma (Peters) has put my family and me through," said Pulver, who plans to attend university in Sydney next year. "It's been a surprise to me that this year has been much harder than last year, but I’m lucky enough to have a wonderful family and friends and we are all making great progress.”

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook


    78 comments

    13 1/2 years for this terrorizing crime. Not long enough. I hope his time is spent getting attacked by his fellow inmates.

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    Explore related topics: world, australia, kentucky, asia-pacific, featured, collar-bomber, crime-courts
  • 8
    Mar
    2012
    5:17am, EST

    'Collar bomb' extortion case: Banker who fled to Kentucky pleads guilty

    EPA

    It is unclear why Paul Peters targeted 18-year-old Madeleine Pulver. U.S. federal court documents show Peters once worked for a company with links to her family, but the Pulvers have repeatedly said they don't know him.

    By NBC News and msnbc.com news services

    SYDNEY, Australia - An Australian investment banker pleaded guilty Thursday to chaining a fake bomb to a young woman's neck in a bizarre extortion bid, before fleeing to the United States.

    Paul Peters' lawyer Kathy Crittenden pleaded guilty on his behalf in a Sydney courtroom to a charge of aggravated break and enter and committing a serious indictable offense by knowingly detaining Madeleine Pulver, 18.

     


    Pulver was alone studying in her family's Sydney mansion on Aug. 3 when the 50-year-old Peters, wearing a ski mask and wielding a baseball bat, tethered a bomb-like device around her neck. It took bomb squad officers 10 hours to remove it. The device contained no explosives and Pulver was not injured.

     

    The man left behind a note demanding money, along with an email address. New South Wales state police have said surveillance footage showed Peters in several locations where they believe he accessed the email account.

    Sydney to Kentucky: Cracking the 'collar bomb' case

    Peters, who traveled frequently between the United States and Australia on business, was arrested at his former wife's home in Louisville, Kentucky, about two weeks after the crime. He was extradited in September to Australia, where he has remained in custody.

    The legal ordeal is over for fake collar bomb victim Madeleine Pulver after her attacker, Paul Peters, pleaded guilty.

    Peters appeared in court by video from prison Thursday. He showed no reaction when his lawyer entered the guilty plea.

    Outside court, his lawyer Kathy Crittenden told reporters Peters was "profoundly sorry" to the Pulver family.

    Why Peters targeted Pulver is unclear. U.S. federal court documents show Peters once worked for a company with links to her family, but the Pulvers have repeatedly said they don't know him.

    At his U.S. extradition hearing in August, court documents from Australian police said a note attached to the chain attached to Pulver read:"Powerful new technology plastic explosives are located inside the small black combination case delivered to you. The case is booby trapped. It can ONLY be opened safely, if you follow the instructions and comply with its terms and conditions."

    A man has been arrested in Kentucky for allegedly strapping a fake bomb around the neck of an 18-year-old woman in Australia that held her captive for 10 hours. NBC'S Sara James reports.

    After X-raying the box several times and conducting other tests, bomb technicians determined it was harmless and removed it. 

    'Wrong place at the wrong time'
    Pulver, who has graduated from high school since the attack, and her parents were in court to hear the plea.

    Her father, Bill, thanked police, prosecutors and members of the public for their support, and said the attack remains as mysterious and as "random to us in our minds as it did back on Aug. 3."

     "We are incredibly pleased with today's outcome," Bill Pulver told reporters after the hearing. "It is great comfort knowing Maddie won't have to endure the stress and anxiety of reliving the events of that terrible night.

    "Today's guilty plea brings closure to a crime that remains a mystery and as random to us in our mind as it did back on August 3."

    New details have emerged about the man arrested in Kentucky for allegedly strapping a fake bomb to a teenager's neck in Australia and how police tracked him down. NBC's Sara James reports.

    Pulver said his daughter was "in the wrong place at the wrong time."

    "A poor decision by one man has prompted a truly extraordinary and inspiring response from many thousands of people and we will be forever grateful," he added.

    A young woman in Sydney says a man wearing a ski mask strapped an explosive device to her neck. TODAY.com's Dara Brown reports.

    Bill Pulver was once the president and CEO of NetRankings, a pioneer in tracking online exposure and readership for companies advertising on the Internet. He left after the firm was sold to ratings giant Nielsen in 2007. He is now CEO of Appen Butler Hill, a company that provides language and voice-recognition software and services.

    Peters will appear in court next on March 16 for a pre-sentencing hearing. He faces a potential maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.

    NBC News' Pete Williams, Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    Explore related topics: australia, kentucky, extortion, featured, pulver, peters, collar-bomb, crime-courts

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