Remembering the Air Disaster Over Cerritos, California
On August 31st, 1986, Two Planes Collided Over Cerritos, Killing 82 People
Immediately, the screen was filled with images of smoke, fire, emergency vehicles and utter chaos engulfing this quaint suburb of Los Angeles. I was in disbelief. I called out to my dad who quickly joined me in watching the events unfold on the television screen. I lived in Cerritos then, as I do now. Cerritos was my home where my mother and stepfather lived and where I lived when I wasn't away visiting my dad on weekends.
The funny thing is, I had no thoughts of fear or doom concerning the welfare of my mom and stepfather or any of my neighbors and friends. I was still trying to digest the shock of having an airplane crash into our small city. As the newscast continued, the location of the crash was determined, and it was not in our neighborhood but roughly two miles east. I knew my family and street and neighbors were safe.
As more information became available, it was determined that not one, but two, airplanes had crashed into Cerritos. The first plane was a large commercial jetliner - an Aeromexico DC-9 - that was headed for Los Angeles International Airport - roughly twenty-miles west of Cerritos. The second plane was a small four-passenger Piper Cherokee that was en-route to Big Bear Lake, a local resort town in the nearby San Bernardino Mountains.
pparently, the pilot of the small Piper Cherokee violated its air space constraints and ventured into the flight path of oncoming commercial jetliners headed towards Los Angeles International Airport. The reason for this breach of airspace protocol has been a subject of much debate. Upon a medical examination and autopsy of the Piper Cherokee pilot's body, it was determined that he had advanced arteriosclerosis - or heart disease - that might have resulted in his suffering a heart attack at his flight controls, which resulted in his aircraft flying out of its authorized airspace and colliding with the Aeromexico jet.
Others believe that pilot error was to blame; that the Piper pilot simply was not aware of his surroundings and did not realize his position in relation to the incoming commercial jetliner traffic. One thing is clear: the pilots of the Aeromexico DC-9 airplane were not at fault. They were in proper position and at the prescribed altitude for their landing. It wasn't until a few moments before the two planes collided that the Aeromexico pilot, suddenly aware of the dire situation about to unfold, was heard, as evidenced by the cockpit voice recorder, saying "oh, this can't be!"
Evidently, the crash was implemented when the small Piper Cherokee clipped the tail assembly of the Aeromexico jet. The Piper aircraft was approaching from a side position, a position that made it hard for the Aeromexico pilots to see it, and crashed right into the tail, thereby disabling the pilots ability to control the Aeromexico jet. I remember a picture that was taken by a Cerritos resident who managed to take a picture of the Aeromexico jet falling out of the sky. It was such an ominous, sad thing to see.
The plane was virtually nose down; falling through the sky as smoke and fire billowed out from the rear of the plane. To think of the passengers and crew members aboard that plane in those last few seconds of their lives as their plane was spiraling towards the ground; it's almost too much to conjure. On the ground, there were four houses that were completely destroyed and many other houses with extensive damage. A total of eighty-two people perished in the crash that day. Fifteen people were killed on the ground; all sixty-four people aboard the Aeromexico jet perished, as well as all three passengers aboard the Piper Cherokee.
In the aftermath of the crash, much fault was placed on the air traffic control system as a possible contributor to the events of that tragic day. On the day of the crash, the skies above and around the Los Angeles Airport area were overloaded with planes; air traffic controllers were overloaded to the max trying to maneuver all of the incoming and departing planes around each other. Much work was done in the aftermath of the crash to overhaul and improve the air traffic control system.
Los Angeles International Airport added more air traffic controllers and added improved radar systems to their air traffic control system. As a direct result of the Cerritos crash, all commercial airplanes were mandated to have Collision Avoidance Systems(CAS), something that was lacking on the Aeromexico jetliner on the day of the crash. This system, which alerts the pilots of approaching aircraft that are dangerously close, would have alerted the Aeromexico pilots to the fast-approaching Piper Cherokee and, quite possibly, would have averted the dire events of that day.
It's been over twenty-years since that August day in 1986. The city of Cerritos has erected a memorial plaque as a monument to those who lost their lives on that horrific day. In the neighborhood in which the planes ultimately fell to the ground, there is no sign or reminder of the events of that day. Life has gone on and the neighborhood is once again filled with playing children, barking dogs, and the buzz of city life.
Published by Jason Medina
I am currently a college student in Southern California. I am working on improving my writing skills, and I am happy about being given the opportunity to express myself on this site. View profile
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6 Comments
Post a CommentI was lots closer than most of you. I was able to hear the two planes collide in mid air and I could hear the plane screaming tomwards the ground. The plane actually crashed on the end of my street. What I witnessed was sheer horror. Pieces of bodies were laying everywhere !!. The water in the street gutters was red from all the blood. I will never forget the things I saw that Sunday morning. I still cannot believe this was almost 25 years ago. To this day every time I hear a low flting jet I pause until I hear it pass.
I remember that day very vividly. I lived on Del Amo Blvd. in Lakwood, a very busy street just a few miles away from the crash site. It was very common to hear automobile accidents from my house and when you hear one, it is irresistable to run out to see what had happened. That morning, almost afternoon, I heard a loud crashing noise. It was a loud booming noise and I assumed it was a car crash out front. I ran out as typical and looked up and down the street and didn't see anything. I thought to myself that I could have sworn I heard a crash. I went back inside and about a half an hour later, my parents arrived home and asked me if I heard about the plane crash in Cerritos that just happened? I asked when exactly did it happen and they told me about a half an hour ago and I figured that what I had heard was the impact of Aeromexico 498 crashing into the Cerritos neighborhood. Very chilling.
I lived about a mile away from the crash near Cerritos High School. I played baseball with Javier and Alejandro Estrada. What a terrible tragedy. I hope the Estrada family is doing OK. I'm glad a memorial was erected. Now I live a couple of hours away but I want to go see it.
No, an autopsy on the Piper pilot determined that he was NOT having a heart attack.
i was on the 91 freeway the day of the crash and say the dc 9 nose dive into the ground. it's a sight that will haunt me forever. the thing i remember the most is the tail section floating down to the ground like a silver hanglider following the crash. i'm never going to get over seeing all of those people plunge to their deaths. :(
Our family lived in Cerritos from 1973 - 1990. I went to and played football at both Cerritos and Gahr High Schools and also won't forget that Sunday. We were coming home from church and couldn't get off the freeway on our exit because of the crash. One of the guys at school who lived in that trac of houses where the crash occurred said they found body parts in their front yard and blood literally running in the gutter in front of their house. That was sad.