Pacific Air Lines Flight 773

Pacific Air Lines Flight 773
The aircraft involved in 1962
Hijacking
DateMay 7, 1964
SummaryMass murder, murder–suicide
SiteContra Costa County, near Danville, California, U.S.
37°45′33″N 121°52′25″W / 37.75919°N 121.87364°W / 37.75919; -121.87364
Aircraft
Aircraft typeFairchild F27A Friendship
OperatorPacific Air Lines
RegistrationN2770R
Flight originReno–Tahoe International Airport, Nevada
StopoverStockton Metropolitan Airport
Stockton, California
DestinationSan Francisco International Airport, California
Occupants44
Passengers41 (including the perpetrator)
Crew3
Fatalities44
Survivors0

Pacific Air Lines Flight 773 was a Fairchild F27A Friendship airliner that crashed on May 7, 1964, near Danville, California, a suburb east of Oakland.[1][2] The crash was most likely the first instance in the United States of an airliner's pilots being shot by a passenger as part of a murder–suicide. Francisco Paula Gonzales, 27, shot both pilots before turning the gun on himself, causing the plane to crash, killing all 44 aboard.[3][4][5]

As of May 2021, the crash of Flight 773 remains the worst incident of mass murder in modern California history, one death more than the subsequent Pacific Southwest Airlines Flight 1771 hijacking in 1987.

  1. ^ "44 killed in air crash east of San Francisco". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). Associated Press. May 7, 1964. p. 1A.
  2. ^ "Airliner crashes, burns in California, 44 dead". The Bulletin. (Bend, Oregon). UPI. May 7, 1964. p. 1.
  3. ^ "Accident Report, Pacific Air Lines incident of May 7, 1964, File No: 1-0017". Civil Aeronautics Board. October 28, 1964. Retrieved October 8, 2023.
  4. ^ "Shooting of pilots blamed for crash". Eugene Register-Guard. (Oregon). Associated Press. November 2, 1964. p. 5A.
  5. ^ "Investigations: Death Wish". Time. November 6, 1964. Archived from the original on January 27, 2010. Retrieved March 20, 2012.