- On Tuesday, a Southwest Airlines flight from New York to Dallas made an emergency landing at Philadelphia International Airport after one of its engines failed and caused an explosion that sent shrapnel into the cabin.
- One of the passengers on the flight, Marty Martinez, told CBS News about the incident while still on the aircraft.
- One passenger died as a result of the accident, according to the National
Transportation Safety Board.
On Tuesday, a Southwest Airlines flight from New York to Dallas made an emergency landing at Philadelphia International Airport after one of its engines failed and caused an explosion that sent shrapnel into the cabin. One passenger died as a result of the accident, according to the National Transportation Safety Board.
One of the passengers on the flight, Marty Martinez, told CBS News about the incident while still on the aircraft.
Martinez said it became clear something was wrong about 30 minutes into the flight.
"All of a sudden, we heard an explosion," he said.
He said it appeared the plane's left engine had exploded and broken a window in the aircraft's seventeenth row. Martinez said a female passenger, whom Martinez describes as "an older woman," was injured as a result of the explosion and removed from the aircraft in what appeared to be critical condition. It's unclear if the passenger Martinez described was the same one who died.
"There is blood everywhere," he said.
After the explosion, oxygen masks were released and the displaced engine reportedly broke through a window. Martinez started streaming his experience on Facebook Live, thinking he was documenting the last moments of his life.
"I thought I was cataloging the last moments of my existence the whole way ... It was absolutely terrifying," he said.
According to Martinez, the aircraft descended for 10-15 minutes before making an emergency landing. But during the descent, Martinez said he and some of the plane's other passengers thought they wouldn't land safely.
"It felt like it was free-falling going down," he said. "Of course, everyone's freaking out. Everybody's crying. It was the scariest experience."
Martinez said and his fellow passengers were told to brace for the emergency landing. He speculated that the landing gave him "a little bit of whiplash," but said that he didn't receive any serious injuries from the incident.
"It was the most terrifying experience," he said.