911 tapes reveal concern after plane crash
19 April 2010 Callers described incidents at building and pilot's home.
A woman sobbed as she described the episode while driving along the highway. A manager at a nearby Old Navy store said his "building shook." A woman in a nearby office said it "sounded like an 18-wheeler slammed into the building," and then she described a ball of fire.
These are excerpts from recordings of dozens of 911 calls placed Feb. 18 after Andrew Joseph Stack III flew his plane into a building housing Internal Revenue Service offices in Northwest Austin. The Austin Police Department released the recordings in response to requests made under the Texas Public Information Act. Authorities deleted the names of callers from the recordings.
The calls are short on revelation. But they show the immediate bewilderment and concern felt by witnesses after Stack, who posted an angry suicide note on a Web page, pierced the day in a kamikaze mission that killed one other man.
The 911 system quickly received so many calls that dispatchers began answering phones asking whether the call was about the plane striking the building. Help is on the way, they told callers. -->-->-->
Related
* Audio: 911 tapes from Stack plane crash
* Audio: 911 tapes from Stack house fire
* Full coverage of the Feb. 18 plane crash
The actions of a tax dodger and his self inflicted anger at the IRS, burning down his home, costing his local community money and time, as well as the possible danger of injury to the firefighters or destruction of his neighbors homes and their potential for injury and more!
The actions of a tax dodger and his self inflicted anger at the IRS, flying his quarter million dollar plane into an IRS leased building, killing a career soldier with two tours in Vietnam and continuing his service to his country by working for the IRS and helping people work out payment plans when they've fallen into trouble or problems have caught up to them. Destroying the building, some inside were burned and needed extensive burn care, costing the community money and time as well as an even bigger chance of firefighters and first response personal might be gravely injured or killed in the devastation caused and while trying to save the occupants of the building he so selfishly destroyed and killing himself!
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