Air traffic controller who sent fire truck into path of Air Canada plane and killed two stayed working even after LaGuardia smash, NTSB says

The air traffic controller who sent a fire truck into the path of the Air Canada plane at LaGuardia Airport continued to work after the deadly crash, the NTSB revealed.

NTSB boss Jennifer Homendy said that the unidentified controller was ‘still on duty for several minutes’ after the plane slammed into the truck late Sunday night.

‘Normally they would be relieved,’ Homendy said during a press briefing Tuesday. ‘We have questions about that. Was anybody available to relieve that controller? We don’t know that yet.’

Investigators are working to determine what happened during shift change, who else was in the air traffic control tower and who was available at the time of the crash.

Officials have questions about the role of the air traffic controllers and whether they were distracted while juggling a late night emergency with another plane. 

‘We rarely, if ever, investigate a major accident where it was one failure,’ Homendy explained. ‘Our aviation system is incredibly safe because there are multiple, multiple layers of defense built in to prevent an accident. So when something goes wrong that means many, many things went wrong.’

The Air Canada plane carrying 72 passengers and four crew collided with the fire truck while landing, killing the two pilots and injuring several passengers. 

Federal investigators said a runway warning system didn’t trigger an alarm before the jet and truck collided at the New York City airport. 

The air traffic controller who sent a fire truck into the path of the Air Canada plane at LaGuardia Airport on Sunday was 'still on duty for several minutes' after the crash, NTSB boss Jennifer Homendy said at a press conference Tuesday (pictured)

The air traffic controller who sent a fire truck into the path of the Air Canada plane at LaGuardia Airport on Sunday was ‘still on duty for several minutes’ after the crash, NTSB boss Jennifer Homendy said at a press conference Tuesday (pictured)

An Air Canada Express CRJ-900 sits on the runway on Tuesday after colliding with a Port Authority fire truck at LaGuardia Airport in New York City late Sunday night

An Air Canada Express CRJ-900 sits on the runway on Tuesday after colliding with a Port Authority fire truck at LaGuardia Airport in New York City late Sunday night

The collision late Sunday came after the fire truck was given permission to check on another plane that had aborted its takeoff after reporting an odor on board and started crossing the tarmac. 

An air traffic controller can be heard on airport communications frantically telling the fire truck to stop.

Roughly 20 minutes later, the controller appears to blame himself. ‘We were dealing with an emergency earlier,’ the controller said. ‘I messed up.’

Many questions remain about why the airport fire truck was crossing the runway while the plane was landing and why it didn’t stop despite frantic, last-second warnings from the control tower. 

Homendy said NTSB investigators have not yet had a chance to review data from the flight data recorder, but that she has seen surveillance video and still needs to interview the firefighters in the truck to find out whether they braked or turned to avoid a collision.

The wreckage from the crash remained on the closed runway, which is likely to stay shut down for days during the investigation, Homendy added.

Investigators need to sift through a lot of debris, she said.

Authorities recovered the plane’s cockpit and flight data recorders by cutting a hole in the aircraft’s roof and then drove them to the NTSB lab in Washington for analysis, Homendy said.

National Transportation Safety Board investigators inspect the wreckage at LaGuardia Airport on Monday

National Transportation Safety Board investigators inspect the wreckage at LaGuardia Airport on Monday

Antoine Forest, 30, was killed upon impact when the Air Canada flight he was flying from Montreal collided with a fire truck at LaGuardia International Airport on Sunday night

Antoine Forest, 30, was killed upon impact when the Air Canada flight he was flying from Montreal collided with a fire truck at LaGuardia International Airport on Sunday night

About 40 passengers and crew members on the regional jet from Montreal, and two people from the fire truck, were taken to hospitals. 

Some suffered serious injuries, but by Monday morning, most had been released, and others walked away without needing treatment.  

The pilot and copilot who died in the first fatal crash at LaGuardia in 34 years were both based out of Canada, said Kathryn Garcia, executive director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates the airport.

Jeannette Gagnier, the great aunt of one of the pilots, identified him as Antoine Forest, and said he always wanted to be a pilot.

The crash on Sunday night is not the first dangerous incident at LaGuardia in recent history, with air traffic controllers and pilots alike claiming the airport is plagued by miscommunications and staffing issues.

CNN review of government records revealed a number of close calls and near disasters have been reported to NASA’s Aviation Safety Reporting System by concerned pilots. 

This included just months ago in October, when two Delta Airlines jets collided on the taxiway, hospitalizing one person as the wing of one of the aircrafts was snapped off. 

The fire truck was completely destroyed by the wreck, but both firefighters in the vehicle are expected to survive

The fire truck was completely destroyed by the wreck, but both firefighters in the vehicle are expected to survive

A terrified passenger shared shocking images of the damage to the aircraft

Previous incidents flagged in the system also include a December 2024 close call, where a plane came perilously close to smashing into another aircraft on the ground, blaming inaccurate instructions from air traffic control. 

Sunday night’s crash bears eerie similarities to that incident and happened when an air traffic controller told a fire truck to cross a runway to inspect a United aircraft experiencing technical difficulties. 

Moments later the unidentified air traffic controller begged the truck to stop, but it was too late and the vehicle collided with the Air Canada plane.

Months before that in July 2023, a pilot reported to the NASA system that two aircraft almost collided after air traffic controllers said one was cleared to cross a runway that another jet was landing on. 

The report said air traffic controllers only realized their mistake at the last second, noting that it ‘issued a stop command just in time.’ 

The deadly crash on Sunday night shut down LaGuardia – the New York region’s third busiest hub – during what was already a chaotic time at US airports because of a partial government shutdown.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents patrol Terminal B at LaGuardia Airport in New York City on Monday

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents patrol Terminal B at LaGuardia Airport in New York City on Monday

Flights resumed Monday afternoon on one runway and with lengthy delays. The shutdown caused some disruptions at other airports, too, especially for Delta, which has a major presence at LaGuardia.

Air traffic controllers are not impacted by the partial government shutdown that has caused long delays at airport security checkpoints in recent days. They have been affected by past shutdowns.

The FAA has been chronically short on air traffic controllers for years.

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