1 dead in Southwest Airlines flight emergency landing in Philadelphia

1 dead after Southwest Airlines engine explodes

PHILADELPHIA -- A Southwest Airlines jet apparently blew an engine and got hit by shrapnel that smashed a window and damaged the fuselage Tuesday. Southwest Flight 1380 was flying at about 30,000 feet when the explosion took place. The incident killed one passenger and injured seven others, authorities said. The plane, a Boeing 737 bound from New York to Dallas with 149 people aboard, made an emergency landing in Philadelphia just before noon as passengers breathing through oxygen masks that dropped from the ceiling prayed and braced for impact.

National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) chairman Robert Sumwalt said one person was killed. It was the first passenger fatality in a U.S. airline accident since 2009, Sumwalt said.

CBS News has learned that the deceased has been identified as Jennifer Riordan, a married mother of two. She worked as a Wells Fargo employee from New Mexico.

Passenger Marty Martinez joined CBSN on the phone from the plane that a woman was injured and was taken off the plane.

"There was blood everywhere," Martinez told CBSN's Anne-Marie Green, adding that people on the plane rushed to help the injured woman while a passenger was trying to plug the hole in the window with no success.

"I just remember holding my husband's hand, and we just prayed and prayed and prayed," said passenger Amanda Bourman, of New York. "And the thoughts that were going through my head of course were about my daughters, just wanting to see them again and give them a big hug so they wouldn't grow up without parents."

"It felt like a freefall": Southwest Airlines plane makes emergency landing in Philadelphia

Seven other people were treated for minor injuries, Philadelphia Fire Commissioner Adam Thiel said. He said there was a fuel leak in one of the engines when firefighters arrived and a small fire was quickly brought under control.

The Federal Aviation Administration said the plane landed after the crew reported damage to one of the engines, along with the fuselage and at least one window. The NTSB sent a team of investigators to Philadelphia.

At a Tuesday night press conference, NTSB's Sumwalt said he's "very concerned" about metal fatigue in the jet engines of the flight in question and that NTSB will focus on a missing engine fan blade. He also mentioned that somebody had found a part from the jet 70 miles north of the Philadelphia International Airport.

Southwest CEO Cary C. Kelly told Sumwalt late Tuesday that the airline will begin enhanced inspection procedures of its fleet very soon.

The flight was powered by CFM engines. An official told CBS News that CFM has sent representatives to the scene to support the investigation.

An engine on Southwest Airlines Flight 1380 is seen after the Boeing 737 made an emergency landing at Philadelphia International Airport on April 17, 2018. Marty Martinez

Bourman said she was seated near the back and was asleep when she heard a loud noise and oxygen masks dropped from the ceiling. She said the plane was fairly quiet because everyone was wearing a mask, while some passengers were in tears and others shouted words of encouragement.

"Everybody was crying and upset," she said. "You had a few passengers that were very strong and they kept yelling to people, you know, 'It's OK, we're going to do this.'"

Martinez did a brief Facebook Live posting while wearing an oxygen mask. He posted, "Something is wrong with our plane! It appears we are going down! Emergency landing!! Southwest flight from NYC to Dallas!!"

"I had WiFi, and I knew I couldn't get any sort of text messages through, so I jumped on Facebook Live," Martinez told CBSN. "I thought I was cataloging the last moments of my existence the whole way ... It was absolutely terrifying."

He said smoke came into the plane through the window and it was difficult to breathe through the oxygen mask.

"It was the most terrifying experience," Martinez told CBSN. "I mean, to think that as I'm going down and people are jumping in my live feed and I'm like 'the plane's going down' and I'm just thinking that at any moment now my internet could cut out and that would be that's it."

After the plane landed, he posted photos of a damaged window near the engine.

Flight 1380 From NYC to Dallas crash landed in Philly. Engine exploded in the air and blew open window 3 seats away from...

Posted by Marty Martinez on Tuesday, April 17, 2018

Bourman said that everyone started yelling to brace for impact when the plane started to land. Everyone clapped and praised the pilot after he set the aircraft down.

Bourman said she saw emergency medical workers using a defibrillator to help a woman who was taken off the plane. Bourman said she also saw a man in a cowboy hat rush to cover the broken window and that the man had a bandage around his arm after the plane landed.

Passengers did "some pretty amazing things under some pretty difficult circumstances," Thiel said.

Tracking data from FlightAware.com shows Flight 1380 was heading west over New York's southern tier at about 32,200 feet traveling 500 mph when it abruptly turned toward Philadelphia.

It was the first death stemming from an in-flight accident on a U.S. airliner since 2009, when 49 people on board and one of the ground were killed in the crash of a Continental Express plane near Buffalo, New York.

Crews work the scene after Southwest Airlines Flight 1380 made an emergency landing at Philadelphia International Airport on April 17, 2018. CBS Philadelphia

Southwest has about 700 planes, all of them 737s, including more than 500 737-700s like the one involved in Tuesday's emergency landing. It is the world's largest operator of the 737. The Boeing 737 is the best-selling jetliner in the world and has a good safety record.

John Goglia, a former NTSB member, said investigators will take the Southwest engine apart to understand what happened and will look at maintenance records for the engine.

"There's a ring around the engine that's meant to contain the engine pieces when this happens," Goglia said. "In this case it didn't. That's going to be a big focal point for the NTSB - why didn't (the ring) do its job?"

Goglia said the Boeing 737 is a safe plane but engine failures occur from time to time.

"We're pushing the engines to produce as much power as possible," he said. "We're right on the edge. Sometimes they fail, and that's why the containment ring is there."

A Southwest Airlines flight is seen after making an emergency landing at Philadelphia International Airport on Tue., April 17, 2018. CBS Philadelphia

The engine failure was reminiscent of a similar event on a Southwest Boeing 737-700 jet in August 2016 as it flew from New Orleans to Orlando, Florida. Shrapnel from the engine left a 5-by-16-inch hole just above the wing. Passenger oxygen masks dropped from the ceiling. Pilots landed the plane safely in Pensacola, Florida.

NTSB investigators said one of the engine's fan blades broke off from the hub during the flight. The broken edge of the blade showed crack lines consistent with metal fatigue.

Before Tuesday, Southwest had never had an accident-related fatality of a passenger, although a young boy died in 2006 when a Southwest jet skidded off a runway at Chicago's Midway Airport, crashed through a fence and collided with the boy's family's car.

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