'Upside down and burning': Several injured but none dead after Pearson plane crash


TORONTO — More than a dozen people were injured but no one died when a Delta Air Lines flight from Minneapolis crashed and flipped over on the tarmac at Toronto’s Pearson Airport on Monday afternoon.

Paramedics said out of 80 people aboard Delta Air Lines flight 4819, at least three people, including a child, were sent to hospital with critical but non-life-threatening injuries. Others were reported to have minor injuries.

During a brief media statement on Monday evening, the airport’s CEO Deborah Flint praised the work of emergency crews in helping the 76 passengers and four crew members to safety.

“This outcome is due to their heroic work and I thank them profusely,” she said.

The flight operated by the airline’s subsidiary Endeavor Air was involved in what Flint called a “single aircraft accident” around 2:30 p.m. as it landed at the airport.

Videos posted to social media showed emergency crews hosing down the flipped-over aircraft with a damaged wing while passengers climbed out of emergency exits to the snowy tarmac. Gusting winds up to 65 km/h and blowing snow were reported at the airport around the time of the crash.

Flint spoke for less than five minutes and offered no details about a possible cause or what factors may have contributed to the crash in her update. She did not take questions from reporters.

Arrivals and departures at the airport resumed by 5 p.m., but delays were expected over the coming days as crash investigators did their work, Flint said. Two runways remained closed.

Flint said 17 people had been injured in the crash, and she did not know of any passengers with critical injuries.

The airport’s fire chief, Todd Aitken, later said 18 injured passengers had been sent to local hospitals.

In an update about an hour after Flint’s, he said it was “really important that we do not speculate” on the cause of the crash. “What we can say is the runway was dry and there was no crosswind conditions,” he said.

Aitken did not take questions from reporters, either.

The figures cited by the two officials on Monday evening were both lower than the 19 people the regional paramedic service reported injured earlier in the day.

A spokesperson with the Peel Regional Paramedic Services said Monday afternoon that a child with critical injuries had been taken to Toronto’s SickKids hospital and two adults, also with critical injuries, had been airlifted to other local hospitals. All injuries were non-life-threatening, said Supt. Lawrence Saindon.

An audio recording from the Pearson airport tower shows Delta Air Lines flight 4819 was cleared to land shortly after 2 p.m. and the tower warned the pilots of a possible air flow “bump” in the glide path from an aircraft in front of it.



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