Legal Case Review - Free, Private, Safe & Secure
  HOME ABOUT US RESOURCE LINKS FAQ's LEGAL COMMUNITY CONTACT US
August 20, 2008

Selecting an attorney for an Aviation Law case is a very important decision. Please enter a zip code to find a qualified attorney in your area:

ZIP CODE:   
 

   California Aviation Attorneys

 
 
< Back to California Aviation Resources

Crippled Jet Lands Safely at L.A. Airport

LOS ANGELES - The airliner circled Southern California for hours, crippled by a faulty landing gear, while inside its cabin 140 passengers watched their own life-and-death drama unfolding on live television.
 
While satellite TV sets aboard JetBlue Flight 292 were tuned to news broadcasts, some passengers cried. Others tried to telephone relatives and one woman sent a text message to her mother in Florida attempting to comfort her in the event she died."It was very weird. It would've been so much calmer without" the televisions, Pia Varma of Los Angeles said after the plane skidded to a safe landing Wednesday evening in a stream of sparks and burning tires. No one was hurt.

Varma, 23, and other passengers said the plane's monitors carried live DirectTV broadcasts on the plane's problems until just a few minutes before landing at Los Angeles International Airport.

The landing gear trouble — the front wheels were stuck in a sideways position — was discovered almost immediately after the plane departed Bob Hope Airport in Burbank at 3:17 p.m., en route to New York City.

The Airbus A320 circled the Long Beach Airport, about 30 miles south of Burbank, before being cleared to land at Los Angeles. It stayed in flight for three hours to burn off fuel, said     Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Donn Walker.

Zachary Mastoon of New York said it was "surreal" to watch his plane's fate being discussed on live TV while it was in the air. At one point, he said, he tried to call his family, but his cell phone call wouldn't go through.

"I wanted to call my dad to tell him I'm alive so far," the 27-year-old musician said.

The pilot finally brought the plane down, back wheels first. As he slowly lowered the nose gear, the stuck wheels erupted in smoke and flames, which quickly burned out.

"At the end it was the worst because you didn't know if it was going to work, if we would catch fire. It was very scary. Grown men were crying," said Diane Hamilton, 32, a television graphics specialist.

As the plane was about to touch the ground, Hamilton said crew members ordered people to assume a crash position, putting their heads between their knees.

"They would yell, "Brace! Brace! Brace!'" she said. "I thought this would be it."

Lisa Schiff, 34, of Los Angeles sent a text message to her mother in Miami that said: "I love you. Don't worry about me. If something happens, know that I am watching you and Daddy and (her brother) David."

Emergency crews from across the area met the plane on the runway. Spectators gathered on buildings and stood on parked cars to see firsthand as passengers walked down a stairway onto the tarmac with their carry-on luggage.

Some passengers shook hands with emergency workers and waved to cameras. One firefighter carrying a boy across the tarmac put his helmet on the child's head.

"We all cheered, I was bawling, I cried so much," said Christine Lund, 25, who was traveling with her cat.

She and the other passengers were taken by bus from the tarmac to the airport's international terminal.

Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, who spoke with the pilot, identified him as Scott Burke and praised him for the calm he showed during the flight.

"He joked that he was sorry he put the plane down 6 inches off the center line," Villaraigosa said.

Ann Decrozals, an Airbus spokeswoman at the aircraft manufacturer's headquarters in France, said the A320 was designed to be able to land with front wheel problems.

JetBlue spokeswoman Jenny Dervin said the airline was investigating the incident with the FAA and     National Transportation Safety Board. She declined to identify the pilot and first officer.

About 57 of the passengers were placed on another flight, which arrived at New York's Kennedy Airport at 6:05 a.m. EDT Thursday, said airline spokeswoman Sharon Jones. Others were put up in Los Angeles area hotels and given reservations for Thursday flights. Still others simply returned home.

Among the latter group was Varma, who was greeted by her parents at the terminal.

"It started out just being a ghastly birthday, but now it's just fabulous," said Varma, who turned 51 on Wednesday.

JetBlue, based in New York, is a five-year-old low-fare airline with 286 flights a day and destinations in 13 states and the Caribbean. It operates a fleet of 81 A320s

Contact an Aviation Attorney in California to find out more about your legal rights.

  • Antioch
  • Bell
  • Hawthorne
  • Long Beach
  • Los Angeles
  • Norwalk
  • Oceanside
  • Pacoima
  • Santa Ana
  • South Gate
  • Norwalk
  • Oceanside
  • Oxnard
  • Pacoima
  • Pittsburg
  • Santa Ana
  • South Gate
  • Sylmar
  • Watsonville
  • Westminster
  • Fremont
  • Fresno
  • Hawthorne
  • Hayward
  • Hesperia
  • Huntington Beach
  • Huntington Park
  • Indio
  • La Habra
  • La Puente
  • Laguna Niguel
  • Lake Forest
  • Lancaster
  • Livermore
  • Long Beach
  • Los Angeles
  • Lynwood
  • Merced
  • Milpitas
  • Montebello
  • Moreno Valley
  • Napa
  • North Hollywood
  • Norwalk
  • Oceanside
  • Ontario
  • Oxnard
  • Pacoima
  • Palmdale
  • Panorama City
  • Pico Rivera
  • Pittsburg
  • Pomona
  • Porterville
  • Reseda
  • Rialto
  • Riverside
  • Rosemead
  • Sacramento
  • Salinas
  • San Diego
  • San Francisco
  • San Jose
  • San Pedro
  • Santa Ana
  • Simi Valley
  • South Gate
  • South San Francisco
  • Sylmar
  • Tulare
  • Union City
  • Vacaville
  • Victorville
  • Vista
  • Watsonville
  • Westminster
 
  Latest News
 
National Aviation Attorney News & Aviation Legal Briefs:

DHS Announces New Aviation Security and Traveler Screening Enhancements
Department of Homeland Security, Aug 04, 2008
The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced improvements aimed at strengthening aviation security while decreasing the hassle factor for travelers...
Read more >

FAA Expands Runway Status Lights Nationwide
Federal Aviation Administration, Jul 28, 2008
Acting Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Administrator Robert Sturgell today announced new initiatives designed to improve runway safety at busy U.S. airports...
Read more >

More News Articles >

  Regional Resources
 
Browse our regional-state resources:

Alabama
Missouri
Alaska Montana
Arizona Nebraska
Arkansas Nevada
California New Hampshire
Colorado New Jersey
Connecticut New Mexico
DC New York
Delaware North Carolina
Florida North Dakota
Georgia Ohio
Hawaii Oklahoma
Idaho Oregon
Illinois Pennsylvania
Indiana Rhode Island
Iowa South Carolina
Kansas South Dakota
Kentucky Tennessee
Louisiana Texas
Maine Utah
Maryland Vermont
Massachusetts Virginia
Michigan Washington
Minnesota West Virginia
Mississippi Wisconsin
  Wyoming
Browse Map >
 
     Hot Topics
 
  • Accident Causes
  • Aviation Black Box
  • FAA Regulations Violation
  • Buying and Selling an Aircraft
  • MACRS
  • Aircraft Maintenance and Overhaul
  • Aircraft Depreciation Deductions
  • Aviation Businesses and Services
  • Small Plane Crash De-Icing
  • Pilot Errors & Negligence
  • Maintenance Problems
  • Air Traffic Controllers
  • Commercial Manufacturing
  • Flight Data Recorder
  • Defensive Flying
  • FAA Security

    More Topics >

  •      Resources
     
  • Top 100 Aviation Disasters
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Aviation Accident Statistics
  • Small Plane Crashes
  • Airport Screening / Hazard Items
  • The US Federal Code
  • Aviation Laws
  • Aviation Related Links

    More Resources >

  •      Did You Know?
     


    An average of one time every day there is a safety-related accident, incident , or threat reported in the U.S., with the majority of incidents going unreported.
    The press usually covers only major accidents that result in total and absolute fatalities.

    The table below is a list of small plane crashes that occured during recent months in 2008. This is just a small list of hundreds of crashes that occur yearly.

     
    Aircraft Type Deaths
    Dayon Thomas Lancair Legacy 1
    Cessna 172K 2

    Beech BE-200

    1

    Cirrus Design Corp. SR22

    1

    Glasair Glasair III

    1

    Beech 95-B55

    2
     
    More Data on Small Airplane Accidents >


     

     

    Legal Disclaimers
    All attorney listings are a paid attorney advertisement, and do not in any way constitute a referral or endorsement by an approved or authorized lawyer referral service. The information provided on Aviation Attorneys.com is not intended to be legal advice, but merely conveys general information related to legal issues commonly encountered. Your access to and use of this website is subject to additional Terms and Conditions.

    Terms and Conditions | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer



    Part of the LawFirms.com Network
    © 2008 Orion Foundry (US), Inc. - All rights reserved.