James Stephen Fossett (April 22, 1944 –
c. September 3, 2007) was an American
businessman, aviator, sailor, and adventurer and the first person to fly solo
nonstop around the world in a balloon. He made his fortune
in the financial services industry, and was best known for many
world records, including five nonstop
circumnavigations of the Earth: as
a long-distance solo
balloonist, as
a sailor, and as a solo flight
fixed-wing aircraft pilot.
A fellow
of the Royal
Geographical Society
and the Explorers
Club, Fossett set 116 records in five different sports, 60 of
which still stood .
On September 3, 2007, Fossett was reported missing after the plane
he was flying over the
Nevada
desert failed to return. Despite a month of
searches by the
Civil Air Patrol (CAP) and others, Fossett
could not be found, and the search by CAP was called off on October
2, 2007. Privately funded and privately directed search efforts
continued but, after a request from Fossett's wife, he was declared
legally dead on February 15,
2008.
On September 29, 2008, a hiker found Fossett's identification cards
in the
Sierra Nevada Mountains
in California, and the crash site was discovered a few days later.
On November 3, 2008, tests conducted on two bones recovered about
750 feet from the site of the crash produced a match to Fossett's
DNA.
Early years
Fossett
was born in Jackson,
Tennessee
but he grew up in Garden Grove,
California
.
Fossett's interest in adventure began early.
As a Boy Scout, he grew up climbing the mountains of
California
, beginning with the San Jacinto
Mountains
. "When I was 12 years old I climbed my first
mountain, and I just kept going, taking on more diverse and grander
projects." Fossett said that he did not have a natural gift for
athletics or team sports, so he focused on activities that required
persistence and endurance. His father, an
Eagle Scout, encouraged
Fossett to pursue these types of adventures and encouraged him to
become involved with the Boy Scouts early. At age 13, Fossett
earned the Boy Scouts' highest rank of Eagle Scout and was a Vigil
Honor member of the
Order of the
Arrow, the Boy Scouts' honor society, where he served as lodge
chief.
He
also worked as a Ranger at Philmont Scout
Ranch
in New
Mexico
during the summer of 1961. Fossett said in
2006 that
Scouting was the most important
activity of his youth.
In college
at Stanford
University
, Fossett was already known as an adventurer; his
Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity brothers convinced him to swim to
Alcatraz
and raise a banner that read "Beat Cal" on the wall of the prison,
closed two years previously. (He made the swim, but was
thwarted by a security guard when he arrived.) Fossett held various
leadership positions at Stanford, including serving in student
government and serving as President of a few clubs. In 1966,
Fossett graduated from Stanford with a
degree in
economics.
Fossett spent the following summer in Europe
climbing mountains and swimming the Dardanelles
.
Business career
In 1968,
Fossett received an MBA from the Olin School of Business at Washington
University
in St. Louis, Missouri
, where he was later a longtime member of the Board
of Trustees. Fossett's first job out of business school
was with IBM; he then served as a consultant for
Deloitte and Touche, and later
accepted a job with Marshall Field's
. Fossett later said, "For the first five
years of my business career, I was distracted by being in
computer systems, and then I became interested in
financial markets. That's where I thrived."
Fossett
then became a successful commodities
salesman in Chicago
, first for Merrill
Lynch in 1973, where he proved a highly successful producer of
commission revenue for himself and that firm. He began working in
1976 for Drexel Burnham, which
assigned him one of its memberships on the Chicago
Board of Trade
and permitted him to market the services of the
firm from a phone on the floor of that exchange. In 1980,
Fossett began the process that eventually produced his enduring
prosperity: renting exchange memberships to would-be floor traders,
first on the
Chicago
Board Options Exchange.
After 15 years of working for other companies, Fossett founded his
own firms, Marathon Securities and Lakota Trading, from which he
made millions renting exchange memberships. He founded Lakota
Trading for that purpose in 1980. In the early 1980s, he founded
Marathon Securities and extended that successful formula to
memberships on the New York stock exchanges. He earned millions
renting floor trading privileges (exchange memberships) to hopeful
new floor traders, who would also pay clearing fees to Fossett's
clearing firms in proportion to the trading activity of those
renting the memberships. In 1997, the trading volume of its rented
memberships was larger than any other clearing firm on the Chicago
exchange.
Lakota Trading replicated that same business
plan on many exchanges in the United States and also in London
.
Fossett would later use those revenues to finance his adventures.
Fossett said, "As a floor trader, I was very aggressive and worked
hard. Those same traits help me in adventure sports."
Fossett said he did not participate in any of the "interesting
things" he had done in college during his time in exchange-related
activities: "There was a period of time where I wasn't doing
anything except working for a living. I became very frustrated with
that and finally made up my mind to start getting back into
things."
He began to take six weeks a year off to
spend time on sports and eventually moved to Beaver
Creek, Colorado
, in 1990, where for a time he ran his business from
a distance. Fossett later sold most of his business
interests, although he maintained an office in Chicago until
2006.
Personal life
Fossett
was married to Peggy Fossett (Viehland), originally from Richmond
Heights, Missouri
, in 1968. They had no children.
The Fossetts had
homes in Beaver
Creek, Colorado
, and Chicago and a vacation home in Carmel,
California
.
Fossett became well-known in the United Kingdom for his friendship
with billionaire
Richard Branson,
who financed some of Fossett's adventures.
Records
Overview
Steve Fossett was well known for his world records and adventures
in balloons, sailboats, gliders, and powered aircraft. He was an
aviator of exceptional breadth of experience, from his quest to
become the first person to achieve a solo
balloon flight around the world (finally
succeeding on his sixth attempt, in 2002) to setting, with co-pilot
Terry Delore, 10 of the 21 Glider Open records, including the first
2,000 km Out-and-Return, the first 1,500 km Triangle and
the longest Straight Distance flights. His achievements as a jet
pilot in a
Cessna Citation X
include records for U.S. Transcontinental, Australia
Transcontinental, and Round-the-World westbound non-supersonic
flights. Prior to Fossett's aviation records, no pilot had held
world records in more than one class of aircraft; Fossett held them
in four classes.
In 2005, Fossett made the first solo nonstop and unrefueled
circumnavigation of the world in 67 hours in the
Virgin Atlantic GlobalFlyer, a
single-engine jet aircraft.
In 2006, he again circumnavigated the globe nonstop and unrefueled
in 76 hours, 45 minutes in the
GlobalFlyer, setting the
record for the longest flight by any aircraft in history with a
distance of 25,766 statute miles (41,467 km).
He set 91 aviation world records ratified by
Fédération
Aéronautique Internationale , of which 36 stand, plus 23
sailing world records ratified by the
World Sailing Speed Record
Council.
On August 29, 2006 he set the world altitude record for gliders
over
El Calafate, Argentina at .
Balloon pilot
On
February 21, 1995, Fossett landed in Leader,
Saskatchewan
, Canada
, after
taking off from South
Korea
, becoming the first person to make a solo flight
across the Pacific
Ocean
in a balloon.
In 2002, he became the first person to fly around the world alone,
nonstop, in a balloon.
He launched the 10-story high balloon
Spirit of Freedom from Northam
, Western Australia
, on June 19, 2002 and returned to Australia on July
3, 2002, subsequently landing in Queensland
, Australia.
Duration and distance of this solo balloon flight was 13 days, 8
hours, 33 minutes (14 days 19 hours 50 minutes to landing),
20,626.48 statute miles (33,195.10 km). The balloon dragged
him along the ground for 20 minutes at the end of the flight.
The
control center for the mission was Brookings Hall
at Washington University in St.
Louis
, Missouri. Fossett's top speed during the flight was
over the Indian
Ocean
. Only the capsule survived the landing; it
was taken to the Smithsonian Institution
in Washington, DC, where it was displayed.
The trip set a number of records for ballooning: Fastest (200 miles
per hour/322 km, breaking his own previous record of 166 miles
per hour/270 km), Fastest Around the World (13.5 days),
Longest Distance Flown Solo in a Balloon (20,482.26 miles), and
24-Hour Balloon Distance (3,186.80 miles on July 1).
While Fossett had financed five previous tries himself, his
successful record-setting flight was sponsored by
Bud Light. In the end, Fossett actually made money
on all his balloon flights; he bought a contingency insurance
policy for $500,000 that would pay him $3 million if he succeeded
in the flight, and along with sponsorship, that payout meant that
in the end, Fossett did not have to spend any of his money other
than for initial expenses.
Sailor
Fossett was one of the world's most accomplished
sailors. Speed sailing was his speciality and from
1993 to 2004 he dominated the record sheets, setting 23 official
world records and nine distance race records. He is recognized by
the World Sailing Speed Record Council as "the world's most
accomplished speed sailor."
On the maxi-catamaran
Cheyenne
(formerly named
PlayStation), Fossett twice set the
prestigious 24 Hour Record of Sailing. In October 2001, Fossett and
his crew set a transatlantic record of 4 days 17 hours, shattering
the previous record by 43 hours 35 minutes — an increase in average
speed of nearly seven knots.
In early 2004, Fossett, as skipper, set the world record for
fastest circumnavigation of the world (58 days, 9 hours) in
Cheyenne with a crew of 13. Both the Transatlantic and
Round the World records have been superseded by
Bruno Peyron on
Orange
II.
In 2007, Fossett held the world record for
crossing the Pacific
Ocean
in his sailboat, the PlayStation, which he
accomplished on his fourth try.
Airship pilot
Fossett set the Absolute World Speed Record for airships on October
27, 2004. The new record for fastest flight was accomplished with a
Zeppelin NT, at a recorded average speed
of 62.2
knots (115.0 km/h,
71.5 mph). The previous record was 50.1 knots (92.8 km/h,
57.7 mph) set in 2001 in a Virgin airship. In 2006, Fossett
was one of only 17 pilots in the world licensed to fly the
Zeppelin.
Fixed-wing aircraft pilot
GlobalFlyer
Fossett made the first solo nonstop fixed-wing aircraft flight
around the world between February 28, 2005, and March 3, 2005.
He took
off from Salina,
Kansas
, where he was assisted by faculty members and
students from Kansas State University
, and flew eastbound, with the prevailing winds,
returning to Salina after 67 hours, 1 minute, 10 seconds, without
refueling or making intermediate landings. His average speed
of 342.2 mph (550.7 km/h) was also the absolute world
record for "speed around the world, nonstop and non-refueled." His
aircraft, the
Virgin
Atlantic GlobalFlyer, had a
carbon fiber reinforced
plastic airframe, with a single
Williams FJ44 turbofan
engine.
It was designed and built by Burt Rutan and his company, Scaled
Composites
, for long-distance solo flight. The
fuel fraction, the weight of the fuel divided
by the weight of the aircraft at take-off, was 83 percent.
On
February 11, 2006, Fossett set the absolute world record for
"distance without landing" by flying from the Kennedy
Space Center
, Florida, around the world eastbound, then upon
returning to Florida continuing across the Atlantic
a second time to land in Bournemouth
, England. The official distance was 25,766
statute miles (41,467 km) and the duration was 76 hours 45
minutes.
The next month, Fossett made a third flight around the world in
order to break the absolute record for "Distance over a closed
circuit without landing" (with takeoff and landing at the same
airport). He took off from Salina, Kansas on March 14, 2006 and
returned on March 17, 2006 after flying 25,262 statute miles
(40,655 km).
There are only seven absolute world records for fixed-wing aircraft
recognized by the
Fédération
Aéronautique Internationale and Fossett broke three of them in
the Virgin Atlantic
GlobalFlyer. All three records were
previously held by
Dick Rutan and
Jeana Yeager from their flight in the
Voyager in 1986.
Fossett contributed
the GlobalFlyer to the Smithsonian Institution
’s permanent collection. It is on display at
the Udvar-Hazy
Center
of the Smithsonian’s National Air
& Space Museum
. Fossett flew the plane to the Center and
taxied the plane to the front door.
Transcontinental aircraft records
Fossett set two U.S. transcontinental fixed-wing aircraft records
in the same day.
On February 5, 2003, he flew his Cessna Citation X jet from San Diego
, California to Charleston
, South
Carolina
in 2 hours,
56 minutes, 20 seconds, at an average speed of 726.83 mph
(1169.73 km/h) to smash the transcontinental record for
non-supersonic jets.
He
returned to San
Diego
, then flew the same course as co-pilot for fellow
adventurer Joe Ritchie in Ritchie's
turboprop Piaggio Avanti. Their time was 3
hours, 51 minutes, 52 seconds, an average speed of 546.44 mph
(879.46 km/h), which broke the previous turboprop
transcontinental record held by
Chuck
Yeager and Renald Davenport.
Fossett also set the east-to-west transcontinental record for
non-supersonic fixed-wing aircraft on September 17, 2000.
He flew
from Jacksonville
, Florida
to San
Diego
, California in 3 hours, 29 minutes, at an average
speed of 591.96 mph (952.67 km/h).
First trans-Atlantic flight re-enactment
On July 2, 2005, Fossett and co-pilot Mark Rebholz re-created the
first nonstop crossing of the Atlantic which was made by the
British team of
John Alcock and Arthur
Whitten Brown in June 1919 in a
Vickers
Vimy biplane.
Their flight from St. John’s,
Newfoundland
, Canada to Clifden
, Ireland in the open cockpit Vickers Vimy replica
took 18 hours 25 minutes with 13 hours flown in instrument flight
conditions. Because there was no airport in Clifden, Fossett
and Rebholz landed on the 8th fairway of the Connemarra Golf
Course.
Glider records
The team of Steve Fossett and Terry Delore (NZL) set ten official
world records in gliders while flying in three major locations: New
Zealand, Argentina and Nevada, United States. An asterisk (*)
indicates records subsequently broken by other pilots.
- Distance (Free) World Record 2,192.9 km, December 4,
2004.
- Triangle Distance (Free) World Record* 1,509.7 km,
December 13, 2003.
- Out and Return Distance (Free) World Record* 2,002.44 km,
November 14, 2003.
- 1,500 Kilometer Triangle World Record 119.11 km/h
(74.02 mph), December 13, 2003.
- 1,250 Kilometer Triangle U.S. National Record 143.48 km/h
(89.51 mph). Exceeded world record by 0.01 km/h, July 30,
2003.
- 750 Kilometer Triangle World Record* 171.29 km/h
(106.44 mph), July 29, 2003.
- 500 Kilometer Triangle World Record* 187.12 km/h
(116.27 mph), November 15, 2003.
- 1,000 km Out-and-Return World Record* 166.46 km/h
(103.44 mph), December 12, 2002.
- 1,500 km Out-and-Return World Record* 156.61 km/h
(97.30 mph), November 14, 2003.
- Triangle Distance (Declared) World Record* 1,502.6 km,
December 13, 2003.
- Out-and-Return Distance (Declared) World Record*
1,804.7 km, November 14, 2003.
Fossett and co-pilot
Einar
Enevoldson flew a glider into the
stratosphere on August 29, 2006. The flight set
the
Absolute Altitude Record
for gliders at 50,727 feet (15,460 m). Since the glider cockpit was
unpressurized, the pilots wore full
pressure suits (similar to space suits) so
that they would be able to fly to altitudes above . Fossett and
Enevoldson had made previous attempts in three countries over a
period of five years before finally succeeding with this record
flight. This endeavor is known as the
Perlan Project.
Cross-country skiing
As a young adventurer, Fossett was one of the first participants in
the
Worldloppet, a series of cross
country ski marathons around the world. While he had little
experience as a skier, he was in the first group of 'citizen
athletes' to participate in the series debut in 1979. And in 1980,
he became the eighth skier to complete all 10 of the long distance
races, earning a Worldloppet medallion.
He has also set
cross-country skiing records in
Colorado, setting an Aspen to Vail
record of
59 hr, 53 min, 30 sec in February 1998, and an Aspen to Eagle
record of
12 hr, 29 min in February 2001.
Mountain climbing
Fossett was a lifelong
mountain
climber and had climbed the highest peaks on six of the seven
continents. In the 1980s, he became friends with
Patrick Morrow, who was attempting to climb
the highest peaks on all seven continents for the "
Seven Summits" world record (which Morrow did
achieve in 1985).
Fossett accompanied Morrow for his last
three peaks, including Vinson Massif
in Antarctica
, Carstensz Pyramid
in Oceania, and Elbrus
in
Europe. While Fossett went on to climb almost all of
the Seven Summits peaks himself, he declined to climb Mount Everest
in 1992 due to asthma.
He also later returned to Antarctica to climb again.
Other accomplishments
Fossett competed in and completed premier endurance sports events,
including the
Iditarod
Trail Sled Dog Race, in which he finished 47th on his second
try in 1992 after training for five years.
He became the 270th
person to swim across the English Channel
on his fourth try in September 1985 with a time of
22 hours, 15 minutes. Although Fossett said he was not a
good enough swimmer "to make the varsity swim team", he found that
he could swim for long periods.
Fossett has run in the Ironman Triathlon in Hawaii
(finishing
in 1996 in 15:53:10), the Boston
Marathon, and the Leadville
Trail 100, a Colorado
ultramarathon which
involves running up elevations of more than in the Rocky Mountains.
Fossett had raced cars in the mid-1970s and later returned to the
sport in the 1990s.
He competed in the 24 hours of
Le Mans
road race twice, in 1993 and in 1996, along
with the Paris to Dakar
Rally.
Previous attempts at records
Fossett tried six times over seven years for the first solo balloon
circumnavigation. His fifth attempt cost him $1.25 million of his
own money; his sixth and successful attempt was commercially
sponsored.
Two of the attempts were launched from
Busch
Memorial Stadium
in St.
Louis
, and Washington University in St. Louis served as
control center for four of the six flights, including the
record-breaking one.
In 1998,
one of the unsuccessful attempts at the ballooning record ended
with a five-mile (8 km) plummet into the Coral Sea
off the coast of Australia
that nearly killed Fossett; he waited 72 hours to be rescued, at a
cost of $500,000. The first attempt began in the Black Hills
of South
Dakota
and ended in New Brunswick
later. The second attempt, launched from Busch
Stadium, cost $300,000 and lasted before being downed halfway in a
tree in India
; the trip
set records at the time for duration and distance of flight (with
Fossett doubling his own previous record) and was called Solo
Spirit after Lindbergh's Spirit of St. Louis. Fossett
slept an average of two hours a night for the six-day journey,
conducted in below-zero temperatures.
After taking too much
fuel to cross the Atlantic
Ocean
and circling Libya
for 12
hours while officials decided whether or not to allow him into
their airspace, Fossett did not have enough fuel to finish the
flight. That year, Fossett flew farther for less money than
better-financed expeditions (including one supported by Richard
Branson) in part due to his ability to fly in an un-pressurized
capsule, a result of his heavy physical training at high altitudes.
The
Solo Spirit capsule was put on display at the
Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum across from the
Apollo 11 command module.
After making an unscheduled landing in a plane, Fossett once walked
for help.
Scouting
Fossett earned the Eagle Scout award as a youth member of the
Boy Scouts of America (BSA),
and in later years, he was described as a "legend" by fellow
Scouts. As a national BSA volunteer, he served as Chairman of the
Northern Tier High Adventure Committee, member of the Philmont
Ranch Committee, and member of the National Advisory Council. He
later became a member of the BSA National Executive Board, and in
2007, Fossett succeeded Secretary of Defense
Robert Gates as president of the
National Eagle Scout
Association. Fossett previously had served on the
World Scout Committee.
Fossett was honored with the
Distinguished Eagle Scout
Award in 1992. In 1999, he received the
Silver Buffalo Award, BSA's highest
recognition of service to youth.
Awards and honors
In 2002,
Fossett received aviation's highest award, the Gold Medal of the
Fédération
Aéronautique Internationale (FAI) and in July 2007, he was
inducted into the Aviation Hall of Fame
. He was presented at the ceremony by
Dick Rutan.
In 1997, Fossett was inducted into the Balloon and Airship Hall of
Fame.
In
February 2002, Fossett was named America's Rolex Yachtsman of the Year by the American Sailing Association at
the New York
Yacht Club
. He was the oldest recipient of the award in
its 41-year history, and he was the only recipient to fly himself
to the ceremony in his own plane.
He received the Explorers Medal from the
Explorers Club following his solo balloon
circumnavigation. He was given the Diplôme de Montgolfier by the
Fédération
Aéronautique Internationale in 1996. He received the
Harmon Trophy, given annually "to the world's
outstanding aviator and aeronaut", in 1998 and 2002. He received
the Grande Médaille of the
Aéro
Club de France, and the British
Royal Aero Club's Gold Medal in 2002.
He
received the Order of Magellan and
the French
Republic
's Médaille de
l'Aéronautique in 2003.
The
Scaled Composites
White Knight Two VMS
Spirit of Steve Fossett, was
named in Fossett's honor by his friend
Richard Branson, in 2007.
Following his
disappearance, Peggy Fossett and Dick Rutan accepted the Spread
Wings Award in Steve Fossett's behalf at the 2007 Spreading Wings
Gala, Wings Over the Rockies Air and Space
Museum
, Denver,
Colorado
.
Death
Disappearance and search

Champion 8KCAB Super Decathlon
At 8:45
am, on Monday September 3, 2007 (Labor
Day), Fossett took off in a single-engine Bellanca Super Decathlon airplane from a private airstrip known as Flying-M Ranch ( ), near Smith
Valley
, Nevada
, south of
Yerington
, near Carson City
and the California border.
The search for Fossett began about six hours later. The aircraft
had
tail number N240R registered to the "Flying M Hunting Club, Inc."
There was no signal from the plane's
emergency locator
transmitter (ELT) designed to be automatically activated in the
event of a crash, but it was of an older type notorious for failing
to operate after a crash.It was first thought that Fossett may have
also been wearing a Swiss-made
Breitling Emergency watch
with a manually operated ELT that had a range of up to , but no
signal was received from it, and on September 13, Fossett's wife,
Peggy, issued a statement clarifying that he owns such a watch, but
was not wearing it when he took off for the Labor Day flight.
Fossett took off with enough fuel for four to five hours of flight,
according to
Civil Air Patrol
spokesperson Maj. Cynthia S. Ryan.A
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) spokesperson noted that Fossett apparently
did not file a
flight plan, and was not
required to do so. On the second day, a team of ten aircraft
searched but found no trace of wreckage after scouring a large area
of rugged terrain.By the fourth day, the
Civil Air Patrol was using fourteen
aircraft in the search effort, including one equipped with the
ARCHER
system that could automatically scan detailed imaging for a given
signature of the missing aircraft.By September 10, search crews had
found eight previously uncharted crash sites,some of which are
decades old,but none related to Fossett's disappearance. Minimal
effort was made to identify the aircraft in the uncharted crash
sites, although it was speculated that one could have belonged to
Charles Clifford Ogle missing
since 1964.All told, about two dozen aircraft were involved in the
search.
On September 7,
Google Inc. helped the
search for the aviator through its connections to contractors that
provide
satellite imagery for its
Google Earth software.
Richard Branson, a British billionaire and
friend of Fossett, said he and others were coordinating efforts
with Google to see if any of the high-resolution images might
include Fossett's aircraft.
On September 8, the first of a series of new high-resolution
imagery from
DigitalGlobe was made
available via the
Amazon
Mechanical Turk beta website so that users could flag potential
areas of interest for searching, in what is known as
crowdsourcing. By September 11, up to 50,000
people had joined the effort, scrutinizing more than 300,000
278-foot-square squares of the imagery. Peter Cohen of Amazon
believed that by September 11, the entire search area had been
covered at least once. Amazon's search effort was shut down the
week of October 29, without any measurable success.
On September 12, survival experts opined that Fossett was likely to
be dead.
On September 17, the Nevada Wing of the Civil Air Patrol reported
that they were suspending all flights in connection with their
search operations, but National Guard search flights, private
search flights and ground searches continued.
The
National
Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) began a preliminary
investigation into the likely crash of the plane that Fossett was
flying. The preliminary report originally stated that Fossett was
"presumed fatally injured and the aircraft substantially damaged",
but was subsequently revised to remove that assumption. Fossett's
friend and fellow explorer, Sir Richard Branson, made similar
public statements.
On September 19, 2007, authorities confirmed they would stop
actively looking for Fossett in the Nevada Desert, but would keep
air crews on standby to fly to possible crash sites. "Nobody is
giving up on this man", said department spokesman. "The search is
going to continue. It's just going to be scaled back", he said. On
September 30, however, it was announced that after further analysis
of radar data from the day of his disappearance, ground teams and
two aircraft had resumed the search.
On October 2, 2007, the Civil Air Patrol announced it had called
off its search operation
On August 23, 2008, almost a year after Fossett went missing,
twenty-eight friends and admirers conducted a foot search based on
new clues gathered by the team. That search concluded on September
10.
Search and rescue costs
On May 1, 2008, the
Las
Vegas Review-Journal attributed to Nevada State Governor
Jim Gibbons's
spokesman, Ben Kieckhefer, the Governor's decision to direct the
state to charge the family of the late Steve Fossett for the
$687,000 expense of the search for Fossett. Kieckhefer later played
that early report down, when he told the
Tahoe Daily
Tribune that Nevada did not intend to demand an involuntary
payment from Fossett's widow, but that such a payment would be
voluntary: "We are going to request that they help offset some of
these expenses, considering the scope of the search, the overall
cost as well as our ongoing budget difficulties." Hotelier
Barron Hilton, from whose ranch Fossett had
departed on the
day he went
missing, had previously volunteered $200,000 to help pay for
the search costs.
In his later comments to the
Tahoe Daily Tribune,
Kieckhefer denied outright that a bill for the family was being
prepared, and he said, "It will probably be in the form of a
letter", which Kieckhefer indicated would include a financial
outline of the steps taken by the state, the associated costs, and
a mention of the state's ongoing budget difficulties.
Days prior to this announcement, state Emergency Management
Director Frank Siracusa noted that "there is no precedent where
government will go after people for costs just because they have
money to pay for it. You get lost, and we look for you. It is a
service your taxpayer dollars pay for", although he conceded that
legally any decision would rest with Gibbons. At an April 10, 2008
Legislature's Interim Finance Committee hearing, Siracusa indicated
that he had hired an independent auditor to review costs incurred
by the state in searching for Fossett, but added,
"We are doing
an audit but not because we are critical of anybody or suspect
something was done wrong". Chairman Morse Arberry queried
Siracusa as to why, since they lacked funds, had the state not
billed the Fossett family for its search costs, to which Siracusa
did not directly respond. In his later interview with the Las Vegas
Review-Journal, he stated that his comments to the Committee may
have given the false impression that he had hired an auditor for
the purpose of later challenging the state's financial burden
incurred on its behalf by the National Guard during the search
operation. Upon interview regarding reports that the state would
seek payment, Arberry was recorded as stating that he was glad to
hear steps were being taken to try to recoup some of the
costs.
The Nevada search cost $1.6 million, "the largest search and rescue
effort ever conducted for a person within the U.S."
Jim Gibbons asked
Fossett's estate to shoulder $487,000 but it declined, saying
Fossett's wife had already spent $1 million on private
searching.
Recovery of wreckage and remains
On September 29, 2008, a hiker found three crumpled identification
cards in the southern
Sierra
Nevada mountain range in California about south-southeast of
Fossett's take-off site. The items were confirmed as belonging to
Fossett and included an
FAA-issued card, his
Soaring Society of
America membership card and about ten $100 bills.
On October 1, late in the day, air search teams spotted wreckage on
the ground at
coordinates at a height of and
within about of where the personal items were initially found.
Later that evening the teams confirmed identification of the
tail number of Fossett's
plane.
The crash site is on a slope beneath the
southwest side of a ridge line ( lower than the top of the ridge)
in the Ansel Adams
Wilderness
and in Madera County
, California. Other named places
near the crash site include Emily Lake ( northeast), Minaret Lake
( west-southwest), the Minaret
peaks
( west), Devils
Postpile National Monument
( southeast) and the town of Mammoth
Lakes
(the nearest populated place,
east-southeast). The site is east of Yosemite
National Park
.
Over the next two days, ground searchers found four bone fragments
that were about by in size. However, DNA tests subsequently showed
that these fragments were not human.
On October 29, search teams recovered two large human bones that
they suspected might belong to Fossett. Tennis shoes with animal
bite marks on them were also recovered. On November 3, California
police coroners said that DNA testing of the two bones by a
California Department of Justice forensics laboratory confirmed
them to be those of Fossett. Madera County Sheriff John Anderson
said Fossett would have died on impact, adding that it was not
unusual for animals to drag away remains. This fact does not
explain how the ends of the acrobatic harness he was wearing could
have come free from the 5-point clasp, considering that their
release requires the clasp to be unscrewed. Manipulating the clasp
could not have been accomplished by someone other than Fossett.
However, there is no proof that this harness was actually being
used at the time of the crash. According to interviews by the
Discovery Channel (who provided a
camera crew the day after his FAA ID and $1005 were found by a
hiker) the one fact that disputes the official findings was the
location of hardware that had been part of the pilot's harness.
Pilots who knew him were interviewed by the Discovery Channel for a
January 2009 documentary on the incident in which they expressed
certainty that the harness could not have been released by any
animal that may have moved his body. The reason for their opinion
pertains to the mechanism (unscrewing) required to release the
harness and the fact that no other hardware was attached. However,
there is no evidence to suggest that this harness was in use or
being worn at the time of the crash.
NTSB report and findings
On March 5, 2009, the
NTSB issued their
report and findings. It states that Fossett crashed at an elevation
of about 10,000 feet, 300 feet below the crest of the ridge he was
trying to get across. The elevation of peaks in the area exceeded
13,000 feet. However, the
density
altitude in the area at the time and place of the crash was
estimated to be 12,700 feet. The aircraft, a tandem 2-seater, was
almost 30 years old, and Fossett had approximately 40 hours in this
type. The plane's operating manual states that at an altitude of
13,000 feet the
rate of climb would be
300 FPM. The NTSB report states that "a meteorologist from Salinas,
California, provided a numerical simulation of the conditions in
the accident area using the WRF-ARW (Advanced Research Weather
Research and Forecasting) numerical model. At 0930 [the approximate
time of the accident] the model displayed downdrafts in the
accident area of approximately 300 feet per minute." There was no
evidence of equipment failure, nor of any medical problem, and the
incident will probably come to be attributed to
pilot error. The NTSB investigation revealed
that Steve Fossett's plane likely went down due to strong
winds.
On July 9, 2009, the
NTSB indicated that the
probable cause of the accident is "The pilot’s inadvertent
encounter with downdrafts that exceeded the climb capability of the
airplane. Contributing to the accident were the downdrafts, high
density altitude, and mountainous terrain."
References
- Fossett sets record for longest nonstop flight
February 11, 2006
- "Fossett sets solo flight record" -
BBC News article dated
March 3, 2005
- "Fossett makes history" - CNN.com article dated March 4,
2005
- Current Absolute General Aviation World
Records
- Rocky Mountain News: Missing aviator Steve
Fossett honored at Wings Over Rockies by Tillie Fong,
November 3, 2007. Retrieved 2008-2-16.
- http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/09/08/fossett.ap/index.html
- 50,000 Volunteers Join Distributed Search For Steve
Fossett, Wired
News, By Steve Friess, September 11, 2007, 2:00 p.m.
- Online Fossett Searchers Ask, Was It Worth It?,
Wired.com, Steve Friess, 11/6/2007 5:00 PM
-
http://edition.cnn.com/2007/US/09/12/fossett.search.ap/index.html
- "Steve Fossett likely dead, survival experts say",
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20732023/
- Check-Six.com - Missing - Steve Fossett
- Search for aviator scaled back - CNN.com
- NTSB Preliminary Report - SEA07FAMS2 - on the loss
of N240R
-
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071015/ap_on_re_us/steve_fossett
- Search For Missing Adventurer Wound Down |Sky
News|World News
- [1]
- NTSB Report
- [2]
- [3]
Further reading
External links