Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Plane makes emergency landing after takeoff in NYC

NEW YORK – An American Airlines plane made an emergency landing Wednesday after an engine failed minutes after takeoff, dropping metal debris onto a home.

No injuries were reported, either on the aircraft or the ground.

The crew reported a loud noise just after takeoff, which Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Jim Peters said indicated the engine on the right wing of the McDonnell Douglas 80 had failed.

American Flight 309 had left New York's LaGuardia Airport at 8:15 a.m. After the pilot reported engine problems, the plane was quickly diverted to Kennedy Airport. The airports are about 12 miles apart.

The plane, with 88 passengers and a crew of five, landed at JFK at 8:36 a.m. — 21 minutes after takeoff. The pilot taxied to a gate and the aircraft was inspected. Pieces of metal were found embedded in the fuselage of the aircraft, Peters said.

The plane had flown over the borough of Queens, where people in the College Point neighborhood reported hearing a loud noise. Investigators later found about four dozen pieces of metal that had crashed onto a rooftop.

Police and aviation investigators photographed the debris, which was taken to LaGuardia for inspection. The bulk of the engine remained attached to the plane's wing, Peters said.

There was no immediate indication that the engine failed because of a bird strike, which caused a US Airways plane to make an emergency landing in the Hudson River in January.

The plane that ditched in the Hudson lost both engines after it hit a flock of Canada geese less than 2 minutes after taking off from LaGuardia. All 155 people aboard that aircraft survived.

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