Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

High In Bolivian Mountains, 2 Massachusetts Men Pursue Mystery Of Flight 980

Dan Futrell and Isaac Stoner climbed Mount Illimani in Bolivia to find the black box from Eastern Air Lines Flight 980.
Dan Futrell and Isaac Stoner
/
Courtesy of Dan Futrell and Isaac Stoner
Dan Futrell and Isaac Stoner climbed Mount Illimani in Bolivia to find the black box from Eastern Air Lines Flight 980.

Two Massachusetts roommates recently set out to solve the more than 30-year-old mystery of a South American plane crash. What they found was a grim reminder of the tragedy that may or may not provide some answers about what happened that day.

It all started with some curiosity and a Google search. That's what led Dan Futrell to Eastern Air Lines Flight 980, which flew into a Bolivian mountain on New Year's Day in 1985.

"The highest recorded commercial plane crash, as far as we know in the history of aviation, at 19,600 feet," he says.

Twenty-nine people died, including eight Americans. Several expeditions had made it to the crash site, but none found the flight data recorder or cockpit voice recorder. One mission by the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board failed when the searchers all got altitude sickness.

But Futrell thought finding those black boxes must be possible.

"Maybe hard, for sure. But not impossible," Futrell says. "So that sounded like a good adventure to me."

Dan Futrell (left) and Isaac Stoner pose with parts of Flight 980 they discovered.
Dan Futrell and Isaac Stoner / Courtesy of Dan Futrell and Isaac Stoner
/
Courtesy of Dan Futrell and Isaac Stoner
Dan Futrell (left) and Isaac Stoner pose with parts of Flight 980 they discovered.

Futrell served two tours with the Army in Iraq, and now that he's working a desk job, this seemed like just the thing to restore a little excitement to his life. He managed to rope his roommate at the time, Isaac Stoner, into the plan.

"I seem to have found a role as something of an enabler for Dan," Stoner says.

The two started planning. They acclimatized themselves for the extreme altitude by taking turns sleeping in a rented tent in their basement that gradually lowered the oxygen level. They arranged for a guide and a cook. Five months later, they found themselves hiking up Mount Illimani in Bolivia.

Outside Magazine reporter Peter Frick-Wright went with them, and recorded them for a podcast.

After a brutally steep and exhausting ascent, they started to find parts of the plane.

"That's the CO2 canister from a life jacket?" one of them asks in a recording from the mountain.

It had all probably been encased in ice for decades, but warm conditions over the last year brought it out. And the ice had preserved more than just plane parts.

"That's a hip bone. Top of the femur," Futrell says in a recording of the moment. "Oh my God."

"We had definitely planned for this," Stoner says. "But it was a moment, it was like, 'Wow, this is real. What would the families want? What's the right thing to do?' "

Stoner discovered this part of the cockpit voice recorder from Eastern Air Lines Flight 980.
Craig LeMoult / WGBH
/
WGBH
Stoner discovered this part of the cockpit voice recorder from Eastern Air Lines Flight 980.

They decided it was best to dig a grave. It's still not clear why none of the earlier expeditions reported finding any body parts, although they may just have been buried in snow and ice. There was speculation an explosion on the flight had caused passengers to be sucked out of the plane before it hit the mountain. At the least, this grim discovery, combined with many more after it, seemed to put that theory to rest.

And then they found a roll of black magnetic tape, like you'd find in a video cassette.

"This either is from one of the black boxes, or it has a great 1985 movie for in-flight viewing," Futrell joked at the time.

Despite their name, black boxes are actually orange. And on the third day of searching, Stoner picked up a piece of orange metal, and noticed wires coming out of it had lettering on them: CKPT VO RCDR.

They'd found the cockpit voice recorder. It was demolished, but maybe that meant the magnetic tape did come from inside of it.

Now, Futrell and Stoner are back home in Somerville, Mass.

Isaac Stoner (left) and Dan Futrell, with a box of plane parts at Futrell's Somerville apartment.
Craig LeMoult / WGBH
/
WGBH
Isaac Stoner (left) and Dan Futrell, with a box of plane parts at Futrell's Somerville apartment.

"So we have a cardboard box, full of orange scrap metal pieces that are clearly very, very damaged," Stoner says, picking it up.

When they got back, it turned out the NTSB couldn't look at what they'd found without a request from the Bolivians. So Futrell and Stoner spent five months making calls and sending letters, before they managed to break through all the bureaucracy.

Along the way, they heard from several family members of those lost on Flight 980, who have been demanding official answers for decades. And here, two guys with a strong sense of curiosity and some energy to spare had managed to answer at least some of those questions themselves.

"A lot of these family members just said, 'Thanks for doing this. Sure, you guys don't have a personal connection here, but you cared enough to go,' " Futrell says.

As they wait for the analysis of the tape, they're hoping there's something in there that will finally help determine what happened on that flight nearly 32 years ago.

Copyright 2021 GBH. To see more, visit GBH.

Craig produces sound-rich features and breaking news coverage for WGBH News in Boston. His features have run nationally on NPR's Morning Edition, All Things Considered and Weekend Edition, as well as on PRI's The World and Marketplace. Craig has won a number of national and regional awards for his reporting, including two national Edward R. Murrow awards in 2015, the national Society of Professional Journalists Sigma Delta Chi award feature reporting in 2011, first place awards in 2012 and 2009 from the national Public Radio News Directors Inc. and second place in 2007 from the national Society of Environmental Journalists. Craig is a graduate of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and Tufts University.