Edward P. Felt

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Edward P. Felt
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Edward P. Felt

Edward Porter Felt (November 9, 1959September 11, 2001) was a victim of the September 11, 2001 attacks. He was a passenger aboard United Airlines Flight 93 on his way to a business meeting in San Francisco. It is believed that Felt made one of the last calls to 911 immediately prior to the fatal crash of the jetliner. He was survived by his wife, Sandy, and two daughters, Adrienne and Kathryn.

Felt worked for BEA Systems at the time, which issued a press release following his death:

The BEA family has suffered the tragic loss of two of its employees. Ed Felt, one of our first employees, best engineers, and most respected and loved colleagues, died in the crash of United Airlines Flight 93. Ed, a senior architect based in Liberty Corner, New Jersey, was one of the original members of the BEA Tuxedo team, and was instrumental in making that product so successful. In fact, this past August Ed was awarded a U.S. Patent for "Method of Authentication Based on Intersection of Password Sets". He was a mentor and friend to many of us, and an inspiration to all.

BEA later named one of their office buildings after Felt.

[edit] Final Call

At 9:58 am, Felt called 911 on his cell phone and reached an operator in Westmoreland County. "We're being hijacked. We're being hijacked," he told John Shaw, as the plane passed over Mt. Pleasant Township. Felt told the operator that he'd locked himself in the bathroom to make the phone call. It is believed that he may have been part of a group of passengers who were herded into the rear of the plane. The call lasted one minute and 10 seconds. At 10:06 am, the airplane crashed into the ground, killing all aboard.

[edit] Biography

Felt, 41, of Matawan, New Jersey, was a technology director for BEA Systems, specializing in cryptography and encryption systems. He earned a bachelor's degree from Colgate University (1981) and a master's degree from Cornell University (1983). He was a native of Utica, New York and a member of the Matawan United Methodist Church. He had lived in Matawan for the past 20 years.

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