The Mercury News

Southwest airplane forced to land after window cracks

- By Mark Gillispie and David Porter

CLEVELAND >> Passengers on a Southwest Airlines plane first heard a loud pop and then scurried away when they saw a jagged crack in a window that forced the jet to land in Cleveland on Wednesday.

Some on board immediatel­y thought back to just two weeks ago when a jet engine blew apart and broke a window, leading to a woman being partially sucked out and killed aboard another Southwest flight.

“It made you nervous because something like this just happened,” said passenger Paul Upshaw of Chicago, who was about two seats from the window. “We didn’t know if it was going to crack open.”

There were no reports of injuries after Flight 957 heading from Chicago to New Jersey landed safely Wednesday after making an abrupt turn toward Cleveland while over Lake Erie, according to tracking data from FlightAwar­e.com.

Some of the plane’s 76 passengers told The Associated Press that the crew quickly checked the window near an emergency exit and handled the situation smoothly.

“People just started scattering,” said Upshaw, who added there was no yelling or screaming. “We didn’t panic.”

Dallas-based Southwest said that the plane was diverted to examine damage to one of the three layers in the window, but didn’t immediatel­y release details on how it was broken. Photos taken by passengers and posted on social media showed one window with a large, jagged crack.

Southwest Airlines spokeswoma­n Brandy King said the plane never lost cabin pressure — which would have triggered oxygen masks to drop down for passengers — and that the pilots did not declare an emergency before landing.

There were no other mechanical problems with the Boeing 737, which was taken out of service, King said.

The plane was built in 1998, and King said it has flown about 40,000 “cycles” or flights, “but the damaged window had been previously replaced and continues to receive regular checks as part of our maintenanc­e program.”

She said it was inspected last month.

Rich Robinson, a sheriff’s deputy from Sandwich, Illinois, said when the window cracked, everybody in that area hit the button for the flight attendant.

“She went running back right away, saw it, and everybody cleared out from those couple of rows,” he said.

 ?? RACHEL COLBY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A cracked window on Southwest Airlines Flight 957 forced an abrupt landing in Cleveland on Wednesday.
RACHEL COLBY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A cracked window on Southwest Airlines Flight 957 forced an abrupt landing in Cleveland on Wednesday.

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