Fil-Am Among 11 Killed in Hawaii Skydiving Plane Crash | Inquirer
 
 
 
 
 
 

Fil-Am Among 11 Killed in Hawaii Skydiving Plane Crash

Jordan Tehero of Honolulu died along with 10 others in a skydiving plane crash June 22. FACEBOOK

HONOLULU — Jordan Tehero took up skydiving a few years ago as a distraction from the breakup of a relationship.

His parents were worried about his new hobby but his father, Garret, saw how his son “fell in love” with the sport.

“Because of our fear, we wanted him to stop,” the father said. “But he didn’t have the fear that we had, so he just continued.”

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Any fears he may have had were taken care of with prayers.

“He always told me, ‘Dad, I pray before every flight, before every jump, I pray,’” the father said.

Tehero, a 23-year-old from the Hawaii island of Kauai, was among the 11 people who died when their skydiving plane crashed and burned at a small airfield north of Honolulu Saturday, June 22. It was the worst civilian aviation accident in the U.S. since 2011.

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The Honolulu Medical Examiner’s office has identified nine victims, including a young couple from Colorado celebrating their first wedding anniversary, several skydiving instructors and a Navy sailor. Two victims have not yet been officially identified, including the pilot.

LARRY LEMASTER

Longtime skydiver and instructor Larry Lemaster, 50, was described as a kind friend who could fill a room with light.

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“I can honestly say, Larry was one of those rare people that entered a room and light followed him,” friend William Pemberton of Ashland, Kentucky, wrote to The Associated Press in a Facebook message. “Always smiling, never a bad vibe, it was nearly impossible to be in a bad mood around him.”

“Larry was among the best of us,” he added.

Lemaster jumped with a professional skydiving demonstration team that does performances around the country.

“Our hearts are broken,” a post on the Team Fastrax Facebook page said. “In all the years we have known Larry he never said a negative word about anyone. He impacted everyone he met in a positive way through his kindness and love for all.”

The native of Kentucky served in the U.S. Army. Later, as a professional in the skydiving world, the instructor at Oahu Parachute Center had over 8,000 jumps in his 22 years with the sport.

On the company website, Lemaster’s profile said he enjoyed exploring Hawaii and base jumping, with over 700 jumps.

JOSHUA DRABLOS

The Navy said Lt. Joshua Drablos, 27, was “an invaluable member” of the U.S. Fleet Cyber Command, based in Kunia, Hawaii.

Drablos was a 2015 graduate of the Naval Academy where he studied quantitative economics, reported the Capital Gazette in Annapolis, Maryland.

Rory Quiller coached Drablos in track and field during his four years at the academy. He said Drablos had a passion for everything he did.

“Josh had an immediate and profound impact on people,” said Quiller, a volunteer assistant track and field coach.

Quiller said the team always had Drablos take recruits around the academy because his personality would get them fired up about being there.

WSET in Lynchburg, Virginia, reported Drablos was a skilled pole vaulter at Jefferson Forest High School in Forest, Virginia.

His former high school coach, Michael Parker, said Drablos was fearless, fast and always up for an adventure.

NIKOLAS GLEBOV

The 28-year-old was a “kind, sweet and gentle young man” who loved bicycling and the outdoors, said his stepfather, Mike Mostad.

He loved and protected his little sister, who was eight years younger than him. Mostad called him “the best big brother a little sister could hope for.”

“I loved him like he was my own son,” Mostad said.

Glebov was born in Donetsk, Ukraine, and moved to St. Paul, Minnesota, when he was 13. He was mature for his age and dedicated to his studies. He played tennis and rode his bicycle so much he went through three bikes in four years.

“Even in January in 2 feet of snow he rode his bicycle,” Mostad said.

He attended college, but found it wasn’t for him and enlisted in the Air Force at age 20. More recently, he went to work for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration on board a fisheries survey ship based in Kodiak, Alaska.

Glebov was at the end of a one-month, six-island Hawaii vacation at the time of the crash. He was scheduled to return to Alaska on Sunday, two days after the crash.

DANIEL HERNDON

The Oklahoma native worked as a skydiving instructor at Oahu Parachute Center.

Stacy Richmond told KTUL in Tulsa, Oklahoma, that her brother passed away doing what he loved.

“He told me when we were kids that he wanted to skydive when he grew up, and it’s what he loved to do,” she said.

She said Herndon’s wife, Natt, would be spreading his ashes in the ocean because he loved the water.

Oahu Parachute Center’s website said Herndon had over 10 years of experience and had completed 4,000 jumps. He was a certified instructor and videographer. The website said he enjoyed sharing the sport with others, exploring the islands and scuba diving.

Herndon’s family plans a private memorial skydive in his honor. A public memorial service is scheduled for July 1 in Oklahoma.

MICHAEL MARTIN

The 32-year-old skydiving instructor also taught kite surfing.

His girlfriend, Alex Nakao, visited a growing memorial near the crash site over the weekend, Hawaii News Now reported .

“He did get stressed out at work sometimes, but he loved what he did,” she said. “He died doing what he loved.”

ASHLEY and BRYAN WEIKEL

The Colorado Springs, Colorado, couple were celebrating their first wedding anniversary at the time of the crash.

Relatives told KCNC-TV that Bryan and Ashley Weikel were really excited to go skydiving but Bryan’s mother, Kathy Reed-Gerk, said she had begged him not to go. Bryan was 27, and Ashley was 26 years old.

They posted images on social media leading up to the flight, including a final post of a video of the plane pulling up to them. The family says the tail number on the plane in the video matched that of the one that crashed.

Bryan’s brother Kenneth Reed wrote on Facebook that his brother was “the absolute best person in the world” and that his wife was his “identical soul mate.”

CASEY WILLIAMSON

Casey Williamson’s love of adventure led him to winter snowboarding in Vail, Colorado, and summer skydiving in Moab, Utah. A year-and-a-half ago, he found his way to Hawaii, where he could skydive year-round.

The 29-year-old was his mother Carla Ajaga’s only child, his cousin Natacha Mendenhall said.

“We’re all very upset,” said Mendenhall, speaking from her home in Fort Worth, Texas. “She cannot really talk right now. What she wants everyone to know is how full of life her son was, how loving he was.”

Williamson, who was from Yukon, Oklahoma, worked as an instructor and as a videographer who filmed customers as they dove. He was trying to earn more jumping hours and learn the trade, Mendenhall said.

The Honolulu Medical Examiner’s office hasn’t identified Williamson. But his family provided Honolulu police with Williamson’s name and date of birth, and the police confirmed he was on the flight, Mendenhall said.

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