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Federal agency opens investigation into Boeing's latest mishap, when a plane skidded off a runway in Jacksonville

May 5, 2019, 00:12 IST

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Boeing 737 aircraft sits in shallow water of the St Johns River after it slid off the runway at Naval Air Station Jacksonville, FloridaReuters

  • The National Transportation Safety Board tweeted Saturday morning that a team of 16 investigators is being sent to Jacksonville, where a Boeing 737 jet slid of the runway Friday night into the St Johns River in Jacksonville, Florida. 
  • No one was killed in the accident, and the Jacksonville Sheriff's Office said 21 people were taken to the hospital for injuries. 
  • The plane was arriving at the Naval Air Station in Jacksonville. There were 136 passengers and seven crew members on the flight, which was coming in from Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories

The National Transportation Safety Board is investigating the Boeing 737 that skidded off a runway in Jacksonville, Florida, and into the St Johns River Friday night.

The federal agency tweeted that a team of 16 investigators arrived in Jacksonville Saturday to look into the accident, which sent 21 people to the hospital. No one was killed. 

Boeing posted a statement on Twitter nine hours ago saying it is "providing technical assistance at the request and under the direction" of the NTSB. 

 

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"Boeing extends its well wishes to all those involved," the statement read.

There were 136 passengers and seven crew members on the flight, which was transporting active-duty military members, civilian government employees, and their dependents from Cuba's Guantanamo Bay naval base. The flight was operated by Miami Air International, a charter airline. 

The NTSB plans to hold a media briefing later on Saturday. 

This is the third issue Boeing has had with its 737 planes since October. The first two - in Indonesia and Ethiopia - killed 350 people, and Boeing's profits were cut by more than a fifth in the first quarter compared to 2018 after the planes were grounded for safety measures.  

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