Long read, but worth it.

Paul "Pablo" Britton

Active member
I didn't write this. Another airline Captain did.


Last Flight

February 17, 2007, 0350 curbside at 24th and M, Washington DC. 16 Degrees
with a light breeze. Going home after my second week of freezing temps to my
home in SoCal. Fly my aircraft, ride a horse, climb a mountain and get back to
living. I'm tired of the cold.

0425 paying the taxi fare at Dulles in front of the United Airlines counter,
still cold.

0450 engaging the self-serve ticker machine and it delivers my ticket, baggage
tag and boarding pass. Hmmm, that Marine is all dressed up early.? Oh,
maybe,,,Hmm, "Good Morning Captain, you're looking sharp."

Pass Security and to my gate for a quick decaf coffee and 5 hours sleep. A
quick check of the flight status monitor and UA Flt 211 is on time, I'm up
front, how bad can it be? Hmmm, that same Marine, he must be heading to
Pendleton to see his lady at LAX for the long weekend all dressed up like
that..? Or maybe not?

"Attention in the boarding area, we will begin boarding in 10 minutes, we have
some additional duties to attend to this morning but we will have you out of
here on time."

That Captain now has five others with him, BINGO, I get it, he is not visiting
his lady, he's an official escort. How I remember doing that once, CACO duty.
I still remember the names of the victim and family, The Bruno Family in
Mojave., all of them, wow, that was 24 years ago. I wonder if we will ever
know who and why?

On board, 0600: "Good morning folks this is the Captain. This morning we
have been attending to some additional duties and I apologize for being 10
minutes late for pushback but believe me we will be early to LAX. This morning
it is my sad pleasure to announce that 1st LT Jared Landaker USMC will be flying
with us to his Big Bear home in Southern California. Jared lost his life over
the sky's of Iraq earlier this month and today we have the honor of returning
him home along with his Mother, Father, Brother and uncles. Please join me in
making the journey comfortable for the Landaker family and their uniformed
escort. Now sit back and enjoy our ride, we are not expecting any turbulence
until we reach the Rocky Mountains and at that time we will do what we can to
ensure a smooth ride. For those interested you can listen in to our progress on
button 9."

Up button 9: "Good morning UA 211 you are cleared to taxi, takeoff and
cleared to LAX as filed." From the time we started rolling we never stopped.
1st LT Landaker began receiving his due.

4 hours and 35 minutes later over Big Bear MT, the AB320 makes a left roll and
steep bank and then one to the right.Nice touch CAPTAIN. Five minutes out from
landing, the Captain, "Ladies and Gents after landing I'm leaving the fasten
seatbelt sign on and I ask everyone in advance to yield to the Landaker family.
Please remain seated until all members have departed the aircraft. Thank you
for your patience, we are 20 minutes early."

On roll out, I notice red lights, emergency vehicles everywhere. We are being
escorted directly to our gate, no waiting anywhere, not even a pause. Out the
left window, a dozen Marines in full dress blues. Highway Patrol, Police, Fire
crews all in full dress with lights on. A true class act by everyone, down to a
person from coast to coast. Way to go United Airlines for doing the little
things RIGHT, because they are the big things; Air Traffic Control for getting
the message, to all law enforcement for your display of brotherhood.

When the family departed the aircraft everyone sat silent, then I heard a lady
say, "God Bless You and your Family, Thank You." Then another, then another,
then a somber round of applause. The Captain read a prepared note from Mrs.
Landaker to the effect, "Thank you all for your patience and heartfelt concern
for us and our son. We sincerely appreciate the sentiment. It is nice to have
Jared home."

After departing the a/c I found myself along with 30 others from our flight
looking for a window. Not a dry eye in the craft. All of us were balling like
babies. It was one of the most emotional moments of my life. We all stood
silent and watched as Jared was taken by his honor guard to an awaiting hearse.
Then the motorcade slowly made it's way off the ramp.

I have finally seen the silent majority. It is deep within us all. Black,
Brown, White, Yellow, Red, Purple, we are all children, parents, brothers,
sisters, etc.we are an American family.

What you don't know is that on the flight I was tapped on the shoulder by Mrs.
Landaker who introduced herself to me after I awoke.

Early in our taxi out from the gate at Dulles, the gent next to me (a Fairfax
City Council Member and acquaintance of the Thuot family) were talking to the
flight attendant and mentioned that we had sons serving on active duty, "What do
you say? How tragic, they must be devastated." He said many of the passengers
had told him the same thing so somewhere in the flight he shared his tidbits
with Mrs. Landaker. Our flight attendant had been struggling with what to say,
to find the right words, so he told the Landaker family of passengers who were
parents of service members who connected with their grief as parents. After I
gathered myself, I stepped back to their row, two behind me and introduced
myself to Mr. Landaker (a Veteran of South East Asia as a Tanker) and Jared's
uncle and brother. What a somber moment. Their Marine Captain escort was a
first rate class act. He had been Jared's tactics instructor and volunteered
for this assignment, as he said, "Sir, it is the least I could do, he was my
friend and a great stick. He absolutely loved to fly, It's an honor to be here
on his last flight."

1115: On my connecting flight, my mind raced. How lucky I was to have had an
opportunity to fly my father to Spain and ride the carrier USS John F. Kennedy
home in 1981. The same year Jared was born. How lucky I was to have my father
on the crows landing when I made my final cat shot in an F-14. Jared's father
never had that chance. Jared was at war, 10,000 miles away.

When Mr. Landaker and I were talking he shared with me, "When Jared was born
he had no soft spot on his head and Dr's feared he would be developmentally
challenged. He became a Physics Major with Honors, high school and college
athlete, and graduated with distinction from naval aviation flight school! He
was short in stature, but a Marine all the way." Visit his life story on line
at www.bigbeargrizzly.net. Bring tissue.



February 7, 2007, Anbar Province, Iraq. 1st LT Jared Landaker United States
Marine Corps, Hero, from Big Bear California, gave his live in service to his
country. Fatally wounded when his CH-46 helicopter was shot down by enemy fire,
Jared and his crew all perished. His life was the ultimate sacrifice of a
grateful military family and nation.

His death occurred at the same time as Anna Nicole Smith, a drug using person with a 7th grade education of no pedigree who dominated our news for two weeks while Jared became a number on CNN. And most unfortunately, Jared's death underscores a fact that we are a military at
war, not a nation at war. Until we become a nation committed to winning the
fight, and elect leaders with the spine to ask Americans to sacrifice in order
to win, we shall remain committed to being a nation with a military at war, and
nothing more. (And possibly no funding if congress has their way!)

1st LT Landaker, a man I came to know in the sky's over America on 17 February
2007, from me to you, aviator to aviator, I am unbelievably humbled. It was my
high honor to share your last flight. God bless you.

Semper Fi
 
"People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf" George Orwell

One of my favorite quotes

Let us never forget the hopes, dreams, families and lives that are sacrificed for this great nation of ours.

Fellow Aviator
 
Paul, great read, no dry eyes here. This is happening almost everyday without notice in America. The saddest day and most rewarding of my 20 years in the Air Force was escorting Senior Airman Nancy Nittler home from Ramstein Germany to her family in DesMoines Iowa 1983. She and her husband were both co workers and friends of mine, it was an Honor I'll never forget and it still brings me to tears thinking about it.

Bill V
 
Thanks Paul,
I sent it along to a few friends. We can not begin to be thankful enough for the good fortune we have.
Bob.
 
Teary eyed here as well. There is never enough we can do for these guys, gals and their families. I try to ship out care packages 2X a month.

thanks for the read

baumy
 
Thanks Paul .............like everyone else it is hard to express our appreciation and sadness......... but I would just add this.......... for many years now I have found myself taking a few minutes when I run into a kid in uniform to ............just look em in the eye and thank them for their service and I urge everyone else to do the same.............it's the least we can do.

sarge
 
Thanks for sharing. Too bad we can't get the media to run stories like that every day. Might inspire some patriotism and we could sure use it.
 
Man ... if that story doesnt bring a tear to your eye and choke you up then you are not human. The story makes me proud to be an american and even more proud of our men and women who put their lives in harms way every day. God bless each and everyone of them...
 
There is a movie coming out about this. Kevin Bacon is the officer escort. I saw some previews and it looks like hollywood treated it right. I want to see it when it hits the theaters.
 
Thanks Paul. Brought tears to this vets eyes.

Mr. Sargent makes a good point. I have bought many rounds in many bars for kids in uniform over the years but it is not enough.
From now on, I will never again pass a uniformed soldier without offering a handshake and a thanks. It is the least we can do.

Bill
 
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