Anonymous ID: b60ffa Jan. 6, 2024, 5:08 p.m. No.20197542   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7565 >>7762

>>20197304

>>20197278

 

member tis…2018….tink a few other plane windows around the same time

 

PUBLISHED: 12:23 EST, 17 April 2018

A Wells Fargo exec was killed after she was almost sucked out of her Southwest Airlines flight window following a midair explosion.

 

Jennifer Riordan, 43, a mother-of-two from Albuquerque, was returning from a business trip aboard the New York to Dallas flight when the plane's left engine exploded sending shrapnel flying into a window next to her seat.

 

The banking executive was left hanging half outside the shattered window as fellow passengers desperately scrambled to drag her back inside the aircraft, which was carrying 149 people.

 

She was rushed to hospital immediately after hero pilot Tammie Jo Shults took the plane into a sharp descent and made an emergency landing at Philadelphia International Airport at 11.27am. Authorities confirm that she later died while seven other people were injured.

 

Shults, a former Navy fighter pilot and one of the first women to fly an F-18, quickly brought Flight 1380 to land having calmly told Air Traffic Control: 'So we have a part of the aircraft missing.'

 

Asked if the plane was on fire, she said: 'No, it's not on fire but part of it's missing. They said there is a hole and someone went out.' She added that 'we have injured passengers' as she requested medical staff to meet them on landing. Passengers say that after landing the plane, the pilot took the time to speak to all those aboard personally.

 

Those on board said they heard a loud 'boom' and the Boeing 737-700 immediately dropped, they said, by what felt like 100ft. Oxygen masks dropped from the ceiling and passengers said their prayers and braced for impact.

 

The National Transportation Safety Board has said a preliminary examination of the blown jet engine shows evidence of 'metal fatigue.' Riordan was sitting next to the smashed window and others next to her described holding her down for 12 minutes until the plane landed.

 

Passenger Alfred Tumlinson, of Corpus Christi, Texas, said he saw a man in a cowboy hat rush forward a few rows 'to grab that lady to pull her back in. She was out of the plane. He couldn't do it by himself, so another gentleman came over and helped to get her back in the plane, and they got her'.

 

Another passenger, Eric Zilbert, an administrator with the California Education Department, said: 'From her waist above, she was outside of the plane.'

 

Passengers struggled to somehow plug the hole while giving the badly injured woman CPR.

 

Those on board did 'some pretty amazing things under some pretty difficult circumstances', Philadelphia Fire Commissioner Adam Thiel said.

 

Amanda Bourman, of New York, said she was asleep near the back when she heard a loud noise and oxygen masks dropped.