As airport officials tried to figure out how a
300-pound arrival-departure panel fell off the wall and onto a family, the
mother of a boy who was killed by the sign lay in a hospital with her own
injuries, still unaware of what happened.
Heather Bresette and two of her other sons were
seriously hurt when the panel fell Friday at the Birmingham-Shuttlesworth
International Airport. She had surgeries for broken ankles and a crushed pelvis
over the weekend, but she was still in intensive care and unconscious.
"She does not know that her baby is
dead," the family's priest, the Rev. Don Farnan, said.
The Bresettes, a family of seven, took a weeklong
spring break vacation to Destin, Fla., and were about to fly home to Overland
Park, Kan., when the flight information panel fell.
Luke Bresette, the middle of five children, was
killed. His brother, 5-year-old Tyler, suffered a concussion. His 8-year-old
brother, Sam, had a broken leg and nose.
Tyler was released from a children's hospital
Sunday; Sam was still there.
The boys' father, Ryan Bresette, and an older son
and daughter, were at the airport when the sign fell but not hurt.
Heather Bresette's condition improved to serious on
Sunday, University Hospital spokeswoman Nicole Wyatt said.
During their vacation, the family swam in the Gulf
of Mexico and Luke went parasailing for the first time.
"His dad said he was thrilled. He was an
adventurous kid. He loved sports," said Farnan, a priest at St. Thomas
More in Kansas City, Mo.
After the sign fell, it took six people to lift the
large board and a dozen people to hold it up while first responders
administered aid. Officials were investigating how the sign fell at the newly
renovated airport and took down an identical billboard on Saturday.
The renovated concourse opened March 13. It was
part of an ongoing $200 million upgrade of Birmingham's airport. The
construction began in June 2011 and is being overseen by Brasfield & Gorrie
Global Services Group.
The Birmingham-based company said in a statement it
was working with airport authorities to determine why the sign fell.
"This is a terrible tragedy that none of us
fully understand, and we hope that the family who lost their loved one will
find strength through prayer and the support of all of us," the statement
said.
At St. Thomas More, hundreds of worshippers showed
up for a Saturday morning Mass that usually has about 75 people. Luke's uncle
Alex Bresette placed a Rockhurst High School jersey on the altar.
"He would have been in the Class of
2020," he told the Kansas City Star.
Ryan Bresette said in a message on Facebook that
words cannot describe the pain the family feels.
In a note to his son, he wrote, "I miss and
love Luke so very much. I love you Luke!"
"Ryan is especially grateful for the amazing
support of the people in Birmingham. They even started a fund for the family at
a bank there," Farnan said. "There are long, loving arms that stretch
between Birmingham and Kansas City."
By Kathy Wingard, The Associated Press
By Kathy Wingard, The Associated Press



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