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Delta Crash Report Reveals High-Speed Descent in Toronto Mishap
A preliminary report from Canada’s Transportation Safety Board shows a Delta Air Lines flight flipped upside down during a crash landing in Toronto last month due to a steep high-speed descent. The February 17 incident at Pearson International Airport injured 21 of the 80 people on board including 76 passengers and four crew. Operated by Endeavor Air the flight from Minneapolis botched its landing sparking probes into what went wrong on a routine route.
The report released Thursday details the plane’s rapid drop as it approached the runway though it stops short of naming a cause pending further analysis. Eyewitnesses described the Bombardier CRJ-900 skidding off the tarmac flipping over in a shower of sparks and snow. Emergency crews rushed to the scene pulling survivors from the wreckage as fuel leaked across the icy ground.
Of the 21 injured most suffered cuts bruises and whiplash with two hospitalized for broken bones per hospital records. Passengers recounted a jarring thud then chaos as the cabin inverted trapping some in their seats. Delta praised the crew’s response but faces questions over training and maintenance as the investigation deepens.
Early speculation swirls around weather with Toronto gripped by subzero winds and light snow that day though conditions were within norms. The report notes the plane’s speed exceeded typical landing thresholds hinting at pilot error or mechanical failure. Experts say black box data due next month will clarify if human or machine faltered first.
This marks Delta’s second high-profile mishap in a year after a 2024 tire blowout in Atlanta raising scrutiny on its safety record. The airline grounded its fleet briefly for checks but insists this crash won’t dent its commitment to passenger care. Critics argue aging planes and tight schedules could strain even the best protocols.
Toronto Pearson one of North America’s busiest hubs saw its runways cleared fast but the incident snarled traffic for hours. Canada’s safety board vows a thorough review with U.S. counterparts joining to dissect the cross-border flight. Findings could reshape rules for winter landings a perennial challenge in the region.
Passengers like teacher Sarah Kim recall terror as luggage rained down and screams filled the flipped cabin. She credits seatbelts for her survival a sentiment echoed by others shaken but alive. Their stories fuel calls for transparency as families demand answers beyond the report’s early sketch.
With 21 hurt and a plane totaled Delta faces legal and PR fallout while regulators dig for root causes. The crash underscores aviation’s thin margin for error especially in harsh climates where split-second choices decide fates. Final reports may take months but pressure mounts for fixes to keep skies safe.
Coverage Details
| Total News Sources | 22 |
| Left | 8 |
| Right | 6 |
| Center | 7 |
| Unrated | 1 |
| Bias Distribution | 36% Left |
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