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Passengers were waiting to board --- then the pilot was arrested in a triple homicide case

Lindsey Bever

By Lindsey Bever The Washington Post

Published May 13, 2019

Passengers were waiting to board --- then the pilot was arrested in a triple homicide case
Travelers who made the trek to Louisville International Airport in Kentucky to board their flight said the scene resembled one from a movie.


Passengers told Fox affiliate WDRB that when they heard their pilot had been arrested at the airport early Saturday morning, they assumed he'd been drinking alcohol on the job.


"It was very tense," Frances Wise, a passenger, told the station. "You could tell the employees knew something was going on."


More than three years after a triple homicide in a small Kentucky town, Christian Richard Martin, a pilot for a subsidiary of American Airlines, was arrested in connection with their deaths, authorities said.


Kentucky Attorney General Andy Beshear announced Saturday that Martin, 51, was indicted in the murders of Calvin and Pamela Phillips and Edward Dansereau, who were found dead in 2015 in Pembroke, Kentucky. Martin, a pilot for PSA Airlines, was taken into custody at Louisville International Airport on three counts of murder, as well as counts of arson, burglary and tampering with physical evidence.


"There will be many steps from here," Beshear told reporters. But, he added, the indictment illustrates what can happen "when you never stop seeking justice, when you never give up on a case."



American Airlines said in a statement that it was "deeply saddened" to learn about the allegations against Martin, who has been a pilot for PSA Airlines since January 2018. The airline said that he underwent a background check and "recurrent vetting" but that there was no "criminal history that would disqualify him from being a commercial pilot."


After the indictment, American Airlines said Martin has been placed on administrative suspension pending the outcome of the case.


"We have an unwavering commitment to the safety and security of our customers and team members, and we will provide any investigative assistance possible to law enforcement throughout their investigation," according to the statement.


It was not immediately clear whether Martin has an attorney in the case.


In November 2015, Calvin Phillips was found dead of an apparent gunshot wound in his cellar in Pembroke, which is not far from the Tennessee border, police said. His wife, Pamela, and a neighbor, Dansereau, were discovered dead in a nearby field inside Pamela's car, which had been burned, according to the Associated Press.


Authorities have not released a motive, but the radio station WKDZ-FM reported last year that Calvin Phillips was a potential witness in a previous case against Martin.


The victims' families said in a joint statement that the three were "brutally extinguished - beyond recognition from family."


"Every day, we are haunted by what was done to them and haunted further that someone was still free to do as they wish, beyond the civility of mankind or laws of our nation," they said in the statement, which was released Saturday by the state attorney general's office. "We are overwhelmed with this positive step towards resolution for people we love dearly; Cal and Pam Phillips and Ed Dansereau, and the hundreds of friends, family, neighbors, coworkers and others deeply affected by their brutal end.


"We look forward to justice in court, and we look forward to a verdict to bring an end to this terror, and a fresh start at healing."


Beshear said he agreed to appoint a special prosecutor a couple year ago after the Phillips' son, Matt, met with him and told him that he was concerned that the murder investigation was not moving forward. Beshear said he assured the family members that "we're going to do everything we can to help you."


In the airport Saturday morning, the mood was tense and passengers were confused.


Wise's daughter, Ashley Martin (no relation to the suspect), called it "startling."


"It's scary to think this happened so long ago, and they're just now getting around to catching the guy," she told the station.


"I was definitely stressed," she added. "I felt like it was a little chaotic and unorganized. The workers ... you could tell they were stressed. You could feel that energy. You could feel the tension from flight attendants."


Martin, who lives in North Carolina, is being held without bond at the Christian County Detention Center in Kentucky, where he is awaiting trial. A trial date has not been set.

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