Dan Futrell | |
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Born | June 12, 1983 |
Education | Gonzaga University, John F. Kennedy School of Government |
Occupation | CEO, Pat Tillman Foundation |
Dan Futrell is a non-profit leader and a U.S. Army veteran. He is the chief executive officer of the Pat Tillman Foundation, a nonprofit that supports education for veterans and military spouses co-founded by Marie Tillman after the 2004 death of NFL player Pat Tillman.[1] Futrell also helped locate and recover the missing black boxes of Eastern Airlines Flight 980.[2]
After leaving the army in 2010, Futrell attended John F. Kennedy School of Government, at which he earned his Master of Public Policy.[3] as a Tillman Scholar[4]
On June 4, 2016, after one of the warmest years on record in the area, human remains and a piece of wreckage labelled "CKPT VO RCDR" were recovered by a team of five in the Andes mountains. Dan Futrell and Isaac Stoner of Operation Thonapa recovered six large orange metal segments and several damaged pieces of magnetic tape.[5][6][7]
On January 4, 2017, Futrell and Stoner — who had been inspired to undertake the search by reading of Flight 980 in the Wikipedia article "List of unrecovered flight recorders"[8] — met with NTSB investigator Bill English[9] to officially hand off the recovered components, following the approval in December 2016 of the Bolivian General Directorate of Civil Aviation for the NTSB to proceed with the analysis attempt. This effort was reported by Outside_(magazine)|Outside Magazine, who sent a journalist with the pair to Bolivia in 2016.[10]
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