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Old 14th Sep 2001, 09:49
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Phil Kemp
 
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Sussex, New Brunswick. Formerly Bowen Island B.C. Canada - one of the greatest places to live on Earth...
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Post Learjet forced to land by military interceptors

I woke up yesterday morning (Wednesday 12th) here in Bellingham Washington, to the sound of low flying aircraft over the house. Looking out I saw an F-18 heading North at low level. Throughout the morning, I heard stories, that a Lear had been forced to land, by military aircraft.

I was up at the airport during the day and saw the machine parked there. This story was published in the news today.

Plane With Donated Heart Grounded

SEATTLE (AP) - A chartered airplane carrying a donor heart was intercepted because of the nation's commercial flight ban, but a helicopter flew the organ to Seattle just in time for surgery.

The Federal Aviation Administration had approved Wednesday's flight despite the flight ban following Tuesday's terrorism, but the military was uninformed due to "miscommunication,'' said Jill Steinhaus, a spokeswoman for LifeCenter Northwest, the organ-procurement agency that chartered the plane.

The chartered plane was flying the heart from a crash victim in Anchorage, Alaska. FBI Special Agent Jim Powers said the flight was escorted through Canadian air space by Royal Canadian Air Force fighters, then "handed off'' to two Navy F/A-18 fighters.

It was forced to land in Bellingham, about 80 miles short of its destination. The organ was transferred to a helicopter to finish its journey.

A heart can last about eight hours outside the body, and six hours had elapsed when the donor organ reached the operating room at the University of Washington Medical Center. The surgery was performed in 56 minutes.

"We had an excellent heart to transplant. The surgery went very, very well,'' said Dr. Gabriel Aldea, the hospital's chief of adult cardiac surgery.

Last year, doctors had refused to put patient Brian Cortez, 21, on a transplant waiting list. Cortez, who is deaf, developmentally disabled and mildly schizophrenic, had been frightened, communicated poorly and sometimes fought with nurses.

His former teacher, Ted Karanson, and his mother, Gabriele Cortez, threatened to sue the university. Doctors relented in June after Karanson took over as Cortez's caretaker because his disabled mother could not care for him.
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