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Continental Airlines Flight 11




  Type Bombing
  Site Unionville, Missouri
  Fatalities 45
  Injuries 0
  Aircraft Type Boeing 707
  Origin O'Hare International Airport
  Destination Kansas City Downtown Airport
  Operator Continental Airlines
  Passengers 37
  Crew 8
  Survivors 0


Continental Airlines Flight 11, registration N70775, was a Boeing 707 aircraft which exploded close to Centerville, Iowa while en route from O'Hare Airport , Chicago, Illinois , to Kansas City, Missouri on May 22 , 1962 . The aircraft crashed in a clover field near Unionville, Missouri in Putnam County, Missouri killing all 45 crew and passengers on board. This was the first sabotage of a commercial Jet Aircraft in passenger service.

Flight 11 departed O'Hare at 8:35 PM. The flight was routine until just before the , but the engines and parts of the Empennage and left wing were found up to six miles away from the main wreckage.

44 of the individuals on board were dead when rescuers reached the wreckage. One passenger, 27-year old Takehiko Nakano of Evanston, Illinois , was alive when rescuers found him, but died from his injuries at Saint Joseph Mercy Hospital in Centerville, Iowa 1 1/2 hours after being rescued. Fred P. Herman , a recipient of the United States Medal Of Freedom , was among the passengers.

FBI agents discovered that one of the passengers, Thomas G. Doty , a married man with a five-year-old daughter, had purchased a life insurance policy from Mutual Of Omaha for $150,000, the maximum available; his death would also bring in another $150,000 in additional insurance (some purchased at the airport) and death benefits. Doty had recently been arrested for armed robbery and was to soon face a preliminary hearing in the matter. Investigators determined that Doty had purchased dynamite shortly before the crash, and were able to deduce that a bomb had been placed in the used towel bin of the right rear lavatory.

This incident might have been the inspiration for the novel '' Airport '' by Arthur Hailey . The plot features a passenger who buys a large amount of insurance using his last few dollars and subsequently blows up the plane with dynamite in the lavatory. However, the novel ends with the safe return of the plane to a snow-covered airport with few casualties.

Flight Number 11 is still used today on Continental's Paris-Houston route.


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