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Newlyweds, Habitat for Humanity board member among dead in crash

By The Associated Press
Posted 8:00AM on Sunday 27th August 2006 ( 18 years ago )
<p>A newlywed couple starting their honeymoon, a Habitat for Humanity board member and a businessman who took an early flight to get home to his children were among the victims of Comair Flight 5191, friends and relatives said Sunday.</p><p>The afternoon before the crash, Scarlett Parsley was in a horse-drawn carriage, arriving for a fairy tale wedding to Jon Hooker.</p><p>"It was the happiest she'd been," said Jarod Martin, a longtime friend who was among the 300 people at the ceremony at Lexington's Headley-Whitley Museum. "It couldn't have been more perfect."</p><p>The two were leaving for a honeymoon in California when their commuter flight to Atlanta crashed just after takeoff, killing 49 of the 50 people aboard.</p><p>"It's so tragic because he was so happy last night," said Keith Madison, who coached Hooker's baseball team at the University of Kentucky and attended the wedding. "It's just an incredible turn of events. It's really painful."</p><p>Hooker, 27, had signed as a free agent with the Chicago White Sox in June 2001 and played professionally for Independent League teams in Fargo, N.D., and Joliet, Ill., before returning to his hometown. He was working as a parole counselor and social worker while Parsley, 23, was in graduate school at Kentucky, Madison said.</p><p>"He touched a lot of people's lives," said Fargo-Moorhead RedHawks general manager Josh Buchholz. Hooker helped the Redhawks win the Independent League championship in 2003.</p><p>Another passenger, Charles Lykins of Naples, Fla., caught an early flight Sunday so he could get home to his two young children after visiting friends and family in the Lexington area, said friend Paul Richardson of Winchester. A woman who answered the phone at Lykins' home said she was aware of Lykins' death and didn't want to talk.</p><p>Larry Turner of Lexington, also aboard the plane, was the chief officer overseeing the University of Kentucky's extension service, according to a statement from the university.</p><p>Pat Smith, a member of Habitat for Humanity International's Board of Directors, was on his way to Gulfport, Miss., to work on rebuilding houses, Habitat spokesman Duane Bates said.</p><p>Mike Finley, 52, who lived in Corbin and owned the Finley Fun Centers, was headed to Reno, Nev., for a rollerskating convention, said his son, David Taylor.</p><p>"I'd say there's thousands of kids who grew up with our father," he said.</p><p>Taylor and Rick Queen, who said his father-in-law, Les Morris, was on the flight, were frustrated with how Delta handled the families.</p><p>"I just felt Delta ran families around this morning for three hours. I finally got some help from a Lexington firefighter," Taylor said.</p><p>The only survivor of the crash was flight's first officer, James M. Polehinke, who was pulled from the burning wreckage by a police officer and two airport workers and taken to University of Kentucky Hospital, where he was in critical condition.</p><p>The pilot, Jeffery Clay of Burlington, Ky., had been with Comair since 1999 and became a captain in 2004, Comair President Don Bornhorst said.</p><p>Flight attendant Kelly Heyer was single and lived in the Cincinnati area. He had been working for the airline since 2004 and was recently appointed base representative for the flight attendant union, said Tracy Riley, a union secretary and fellow Comair flight attendant.</p><p>"He was a standup individual," Riley said. "He was very professional, loved the job."</p><p>Bornhorst described his own reaction to the crash as "complete devastation" and he lamented the frustration of the families as they awaited word.</p><p>"When tragedies like this happen, information can just not be relayed fast enough and I certainly understand the frustrations related to that," Bornhorst said.</p><p>____</p><p>Associated Press Writers Harry Weber in Atlanta, Samira Jafari in Lexington and Blake Nicholson in Bismarck, N.D., contributed to this report.</p>

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