Space Debris Suspected in Plane Emergency, Desert Crash
United Airlines Flight 1093 with 140 people aboard safely diverted after a windshield cracked mid-flight near Utah; the National Transportation Safety Board is investigating the cause.
- United Airlines flight 1093, traveling from Denver to Los Angeles, had to divert to Salt Lake City due to a crack in its windshield identified by the pilots mid-flight.
- The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating the cracked windscreen and examining it in their laboratory.
- United flight 1093, carrying 134 passengers and six crew members, landed safely in Salt Lake City.
- The incidents come amid a government shutdown affecting airport operations, as reported by multiple sources.
181 Articles
181 Articles
United Airlines passenger describes panic on flight after mystery object smashes windshield, injures pilot
United Flight 1093 from Denver to Los Angeles made an emergency landing in Salt Lake City on Thursday after something smashed into the windshield with such force that it shattered a layer of glass and injured one of the pilots.
United Airlines pilot claims plane was struck by space debris at 36,000 feet
United Airlines Flight 1093 was flying from Denver to Los Angeles when the captain reported hitting space debris at 36,000 feet, forcing a diversion to Salt Lake City. The Boeing 737, carrying 140 passengers, landed safely on Thursday following visible damage to the cockpit windshield and a minor injury to the pilot's arm. Photos shared online show cracks across the cockpit glass and small fragments scattered inside the flight deck. Aviation soc…
The aircraft, which covered the route between Denver and Los Angeles, landed without incident in Salt Lake City; NTSB analyses the source of the damage
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 57% of the sources are Center
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium