My Ercoupe partner Tom was in the air after flying Young Eagles and was on 122.8 as it occurred. Here is how it sounded from the air:
I flew back to Sparta by way of Washington, and while tuned to 122.8, I heard the entire incident involving a jump plane pilot who had to ditch a 182 because a parachute got wrapped around his tail and he lost almost all of his ability to raise or lower the nose.
The pilot's name was Shawn (or Sean) and all jumpers were out. He was reporting mechanical difficulty with the elevator. He couldn't move the elevator but only a very small amount, and was planning for a flat landing at Festus. He descended by cutting the power and giving it as much forward pitch that he could and slowly descended from 9,000 to about 6,000 when another aircraft launched from Festus, met him and reported that there was a parachute wrapped around his tail, and I'm pretty sure he said the tail was bent.
There was then a discussion about his ability to land safely. The concern was that he would not be able to flare, and the landing would be flat, and there would be no way to pull up to go around if it looked bad. Finally, someone on the ground asked him if he had a parachute on board, and he said that there was one, but he had never jumped before. The discussion turned from landing to jumping and ditching. Ultimately, that's what he decided to do. But now a new problem, he had descended too far for a safe jump, so he had to get some more altitude, at least 2,000 ft. He slowly got above 2,000 Ft at a rate of 50 - 75 FPM. Then he flew over to Illinois where there was less of a chance of the plane hitting anything or anybody. The last transmission he made, was, "I'm going now." A second of silence, then a voice from the ground, "Don't forget to pull the power!" Probably too late, but apparently he did, because the pilot
parachuted safely and the plane crashed harmlessly in a field not too far away.