Stories of survival emerge from deadly New York airport collision as officials investigate its cause

NEW YORK (AP) — Moments after an Air Canada jetcollided at high speed with a fire truckat New York's LaGuardia Airport, killing the pilots and hurling a flight attendant from the aircraft, the passengers took their escape into their own hands.

Associated Press Officials investigate the site, Monday, March 23, 2026, where an Air Canada jet came to rest after colliding with a Port Authority firetruck at LaGuardia Airport, shortly after landing Sunday night in New York. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig) An Air Canada jet and Port Authority fire truck sit on the runway at LaGuardia Airport, Monday, March 23, 2026, after colliding with each other after the jet landed Sunday night in New York. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig) An Air Canada Jet sits on the runway at LaGuardia Airport, Monday, March 23, 2026, after colliding with a Port Authority aircraft rescue and firefighting vehicle in New York. (AP Photo/Ryan Murphy) Department of Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy speaks during a news conference at LaGuardia Airport, Monday, March 23, 2026, after an Air Canada jet collided the night before with a Port Authority firetruck shortly after landing in New York. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig) A map showing LaGuardia Airport, New York. (AP Digital Embed)

APTOPIX LaGuardia Crash

With the smell of fuel in the air and debris dangling from the obliterated cockpit, passengers tore open emergency exit doors, jumped off the plane's wings and then turned around to catch others coming up behind them, some bleeding or with head wounds.

"Strangely enough, I wasn't scared or panicked. On the contrary, I think most of us were pretty aware of what happened," said passenger Clément Lelièvre. "So we all went outside; we got other people out."

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.

As investigators continued delving Tuesday into what caused thecatastrophic wreck, stories of survival also emerged — including that of the flight attendant, found injured but alive outside the aircraft.

Lelièvre credited the pilots' "incredible reflexes" with saving lives. The pilots braked extremely hard just as the plane touched down, he said.

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."

A key for investigators will be examining coordination of the airport's air traffic and ground traffic at the time of the crash, said Mary Schiavo, a former Department of Transportation Inspector General.

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said LaGuardia is "well-staffed" but faces a shortage of controllers.

The runway where the crash happened is likely to be closed for "days" during the investigation, Jennifer Homendy, chair of the National Transportation Safety Board, which is leading the investigation, said at a news conference Monday. 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.

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It was too early in the investigation to answer many questions about the accident, but more information was expected to be released Tuesday, she said.

The crash shut down LaGuardia — the New York region's third busiest hub — during what was already amessy time at U.S. airportsbecause of a partial government shutdown.

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.

There were 72 passengers and four crew members aboard the Jazz Aviation flight operating on behalf of Air Canada, according to the airline. The flight originated at Montreal-Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport. Canada has also sent a team of investigators.

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.

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

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

LaGuardia is one of 35 major U.S. airports with an advanced surface surveillance system designed to help keep track of planes and vehicles crossing the airport.

An alarm heard in the background of the air traffic control audio was likely from the system and would have alerted the tower to the potential collision, Former FAA air traffic control chief Mike McCormick said.

FAA statisticsshow there were 1,636 runway incursions last year.

Associated Press reporters Michael R. Sisak, Anthony Izaguirre and Mae Anderson in New York; Rob Gillies in Toronto; Josh Funk in Omaha, Nebraska; Kathy McCormack in Concord, New Hampshire; and Hallie Golden in Seattle contributed.

Stories of survival emerge from deadly New York airport collision as officials investigate its cause

NEW YORK (AP) — Moments after an Air Canada jetcollided at high speed with a fire truckat New York's LaGuardia Airpor...
Supreme Court to scrutinize former policy of turning away asylum seekers at southern border

The Supreme Court on Tuesday will consider the legality of a policy championed by President Donald Trump during his first term that prevented scores of migrants arriving at the southern border from starting the process of applying for asylum.

CNN The wall at the US-Mexico border is seen in Nogales, Arizona, on February 4, 2026. - Olivier Touron/AFP via Getty Images

The policy was rolled out under President Barack Obama, formalized by Trump and rescinded in 2021 under President Joe Biden, but the Justice Department has continued to defend it in court over the years. Trump's solicitor general, D. John Sauer, recently told the justices the measure is a "critical tool for addressing border surges and preventing overcrowding at ports of entry."

The case is one of several before the high court this session testing controversial immigration policies that Trump wants justices to approve. Next month, the nine will review an order he issued last year that sought to end birthright citizenship, as well as hisefforts to end temporary deportation protectionsfor Haitians and Syrians.

Officials have not said publicly whether they plan to revive the asylum policy, known as "metering," which was introduced during the waning weeks of the Obama administration and fleshed out by Trump in 2018.

But the current administration's decision to continue backing it in court underscores its desire to keep the policy as a backup avenue to stem the flow of migrants at the border as other restrictive measures face challenges in court.

"The Supreme Court isn't supposed to decide hypothetical questions, which is why it's weird that it agreed to take up this appeal in the first place," said Steve Vladeck, CNN Supreme Court analyst and professor at Georgetown University Law Center.

"Whether or not the Trump administration wants to restart this particular policy, the fact that it isn't currently in effect ought to be fatal to the Supreme Court's power to decide this case, one way or the other," he added.

Under federal law, the government must process a migrant who presents at a port of entry and is fleeing political, racial or religious persecution in their home country. A migrant covered under that requirement is defined as someone "who is physically present in the United States or who arrives in the United States."

But the metering policy enabled federal agents stationed at the border to turn back such asylum seekers before they ever stepped foot on US soil. The policy, which aimed to help officials manage the number of migrants seeking safe haven in recent years, gave workers at ports the flexibility to let in migrants if they determined there was "sufficient space and resources to process them."

The question before the justices on Tuesday is relatively straightforward: Is a migrant who is stopped by federal agents on the Mexican side of the border covered under the law that requires officials to begin passing them through the asylum process?

The administration contends the answer is "no."

"The ordinary meaning of 'arrives in' refers to entering a specified place, not just coming close to it. An alien who is stopped in Mexico does not arrive in the United States," Sauer wrote in court papers. "The phrase 'arrives in the United States' does not even plausibly, much less clearly, cover aliens in Mexico."

But an immigrant rights group and more than a dozen individuals who represent a class of migrants that challenged the policy have countered that the answer is an unequivocal "yes."

"Congress's use of the present tense" in the statute shows that lawmakers wanted the law's "mandates to apply not only to those who have arrived, but also to those who are attempting to step over the border," the policy's legal foes said in written arguments submitted ahead of Tuesday's hearing.

"If Congress wanted the law to cover only noncitizens who had arrived, it would have said so," their lawyers told the justices.

Lower courts sided against the policy

When Obama rolled out the first iteration of the policy in 2016, officials at the border were reeling from a surge of Haitian asylum seekers, which had overwhelmed their ability to manage the situation.

But after Trump took office and formalized a more robust version of the policy, the government was taken to court by Al Otro Lado, a nonprofit legal services organization for asylum seekers, and the 13 individual challengers.

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A federal judge in California ruled the policy was unlawful and certified a class of individuals to be shielded from it.

In a divided decision in 2024, the 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed that ruling, concluding the policy ran afoul of the federal law.

"The phrase 'physically present in the United States' encompasses noncitizens within our borders, and the phrase 'arrives in the United States' encompasses those who encounter officials at the border, whichever side of the border they are standing on," Judge Michelle Friedland wrote in the majority decision.

Notably, Friedland, who was joined by fellow Obama appointee John Owens, stressed that the ruling left the government "with wide latitude and flexibility to carry out its duties at the border."

Federal laws, Friedland said, "require border officials to inspect noncitizens seeking asylum at the border, and the metering policy withheld that duty."

A connection to the past

Policy decisions on managing asylum seekers at the southern border have changed frequently in recent years.

Biden's solution was to have migrants use a phone app to schedule appointments with federal agents at a legal port of entry. They then waited outside the US until they could be inspected by an immigration officer and begin the asylum process.

Though Biden rolled back the metering policy in November 2021, his Justice Department continued defending its legality in court, telling the 9th Circuit that the policy was "reasonably based on demonstrated capacity constraints."

Trump ended the Biden-era appointment policy after returning to office last year, and he shut down the border for asylum seekers. That decision is at the center of a legal challenge making its way through the federal courts in Washington, DC.

When the metering policy was in place, it frustrated the ability of tens of thousands of migrants to move forward in seeking asylum, according to the Strauss Center at the University of Texas at Austin.

Turning those people back, the policy's challengers told the high court, "quickly created a humanitarian crisis in Mexico."

"As CBP continued to refuse to inspect or process asylum seekers, many of those turned away found themselves living in makeshift camps on the Mexican side of the border," they told the justices in court papers. "The growing bottleneck of asylum seekers turned back by (Customs and Border Patrol) waited near the ports for weeks and then months without reliable food sources, shelter, or safety."

Some, they said, "attempted instead to enter the United States between ports and died while crossing the Rio Grande or the Sonoran Desert."

That reality has drawn comparisons to a World War II-era episode during which the US turned away the MS St. Louis, a ship ferrying nearly 1,000 Jewish refugees fleeing Europe in 1939.

HIAS, formerly known as the Hebrew Immigrants Aid Society, told the justices in court papers that the metering policy "creates a legal no man's land" that puts the safety of asylum seekers at risk.

"People are left in limbo in dangerous border towns, unable to access the process our laws guarantee to those who arrive at a port of entry and present themselves to US officials standing on US soil," the group said in its friend-of-the-court brief. "It is the kind of purgatory experienced by the St. Louis passengers and that Congress eradicated for those who reach a port of entry: safety visible but unreachable."

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Supreme Court to scrutinize former policy of turning away asylum seekers at southern border

The Supreme Court on Tuesday will consider the legality of a policy championed by President Donald Trump during his first...
Stephen Curry will participate in play-in tourney for Warriors if he's able, coach Steve Kerr says

DALLAS (AP) —Stephen Currywill be available for the play-in tournament if his ailing right knee allows.

Associated Press Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry wears street clothes while standing near his team's bench during a timeout against the Dallas Mavericks in the first half of an NBA basketball game Monday, March 23, 2026, in Dallas. (AP Photo/Julio Cortez) Golden State Warriors' Stephen Curry reacts from the bench during the second half of an NBA basketball game against the Minnesota Timberwolves, Friday, March 13, 2026, in San Francisco. (AP Photo/Godofredo A. Vásquez) Golden State Warriors' Stephen Curry, left, greets Brandin Podziemski at the end of an NBA basketball game against the New York Knicks Sunday, March 15, 2026, in New York. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)

Warriors Mavericks Basketball

Golden State coach Steve Kerr dismissed the notion that the Warriors would sit their superstar without a guaranteed spot in the playoffs.

Kerr said beforeGolden State's 137-131 overtime victory at Dallason Monday night thatCurry's planned participation in practicea day earlier was put off by the medical staff. A six-game road trip ends against the Mavericks, and the Warriors will decide what's next for Curry after they get home.

"It's all just part of the rehab and all the different testing he does," Kerr said. "Just pushed back a day or two."

The Warriors are in 10th place in the Western Conference, and if they finish the season in that final spot in the play-in tournament, they would have to win two road games to make the playoffs.

Curry hasn't played since Jan. 30 as he deals with patella-femoral pain syndrome and bone bruising in the knee. Golden State is 23-16 with Curry and 11-22 without him this season.

The win over the Mavericks was just the second in the past 10 games for the Warriors, who are 7-15 since Curry's latest injury. Golden State guard Moses Moody exited late in OT with an apparently serious left knee injury.

"We're not chasing a play-in berth. We are squarely in the play-in no matter what we do," Kerr said. "Bottom line, if Steph is healthy, he's going to play because that's what we're here for. The chance to get into the playoffs is a big deal for us, big deal for Steph."

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At the same time, Kerr said if there's any risk of longer-term damage to the knee, Curry won't play. The 38-year-old leads the Warriors in scoring at 27.2 points per game.

Kerr deflected the question of whether Curry was disappointed that his return to practice was put off at least two more days.

Golden State had initially hoped he would return right after the All-Star break, andCurry sat out the All-Star Game this year.

"It's been a long haul," the coach said. "He's dying to get out there, for sure."

This story was corrected to show the Warriors are 23-16 when Stephen Curry plays, not 23-17.

AP NBA:https://apnews.com/NBA

Stephen Curry will participate in play-in tourney for Warriors if he's able, coach Steve Kerr says

DALLAS (AP) —Stephen Currywill be available for the play-in tournament if his ailing right knee allows. Warri...
Female boxer out of coma two days after brutal knockout, says official

A 19-year-old female boxer whowas in a medically induced comaafter getting knocked out during a pro fight in California on Saturday, March 21 was off the ventilator and able to follow commands on Monday, March 23, according to an official who spoke to USA TODAY Sports on the condition they not be identified because of the sensitivity of the matter.

USA TODAY Sports

The woman, Isis Sio of North Dakota, was able to say her name and have a conversation but remains at Loma Linda University Health medical center in Southern California, according to the official.

Sio got knocked out by 21-year-old Jocelyn Camarillo at 1:18 in the first round of their fight, part of a seven-fight boxing card held at the Orange Show Events Center in San Bernardino

Video of the light flyweight bout shows Sio getting hit twice in the body followed by a five-punch combination to the head before she drops to the canvas. Sio suffered a seizure, according to the official.

Both fighters weighed in at 107 1/2 pounds for the fight.

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ProBox TV issued a statementon Sunday, March 22 saying Sio was in a medically induced coma. ProBox TV is owned by Garry Jonas, one of three people listed as promoters of the event.

"Our thoughts are with her and her family at this difficult time," the statement reads. "Please join us in wishing for a full recovery."

It's unclear when Sio could be discharged from the hospital, according to the official.

Sio's record dropped to 1-3 as a pro. Camarillo, who fights for Jake Paul's Most Valuable Promotions (MVP), improved to 6-0.

Last weekend MVP posted a video clip of the knockout on its X and Facebook accounts along with a caption that read in part, "KO of the year??" On Monday, MVP took down the video clip andposted"Wishing Isis Sio strength, healing, and a full recovery. Our thoughts are with her, her family, and her team."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Boxer Isis Sio out of coma two days after knockout, official says

Female boxer out of coma two days after brutal knockout, says official

A 19-year-old female boxer whowas in a medically induced comaafter getting knocked out during a pro fight in California o...
Senators boost their playoff push by beating the Rangers 2-1

NEW YORK (AP) — Shane Pinto scored on the power play, Warren Foegele added his fifth goal in nine gamessince being tradedand the Ottawa Senators made up more ground in their chase to make the playoffs by beating the New York Rangers 2-1 on Monday night.

Associated Press Ottawa Senators' Claude Giroux (28) drives past New York Rangers' Vincent Trocheck (16) during the second period of an NHL hockey game Monday, March 23, 2026, in New York. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II) Ottawa Senators' Nick Cousins (21) checks New York Rangers' Vladislav Gavrikov (44) during the second period of an NHL hockey game Monday, March 23, 2026, in New York. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II) Ottawa Senators' Lassi Thomson (60) reacts after getting hurt during the second period of an NHL hockey game against the New York Rangers Monday, March 23, 2026, in New York. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II) Ottawa Senators' Lassi Thomson (60) defends New York Rangers' Jaroslav Chmelar (49) during the second period of an NHL hockey game Monday, March 23, 2026, in New York. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II) Ottawa Senators' Warren Foegele celebrates with teammates after scoring a goal during the second period of an NHL hockey game against the New York Rangers Monday, March 23, 2026, in New York. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II)

Senators Rangers Hockey

The Rangers had just nine shots on goal, matching a franchise worst set on Dec. 11, 1955, in a defeat at Detroit — and the fewest in a game by any NHL team since 2003. They lost for a 25th time in 34 home games this season.

Ottawa won its third in a row, improving to 14-3-2 since Jan. 25 and moving two points back of the second and final wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference with 12 games to play.

The latest victory came at a cost of two more injuries to an already depleted defense. Thomas Chabot took a stick to the right arm from J.T. Miller in the final seconds of the first period and Lassi Thomson left his first NHL game since Nov. 25, 2022, during the second because of a lower-body injury. Neither returned.

The Senators, missing Jake Sanderson because of an upper-body injury and Nick Jensen following knee surgery, finished the game with four defensemen.

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New York goaltender Igor Shesterkin stopped 31 shots and was the only reason the deficit wasn't worse. Conor Sheary scored on the Rangers' seventh shot to end James Reimer's shutout bid with 13 minutes left.

Mika Zibanejad skated in his 1,000th regular-season game, his 719th with the Rangers after playing his first 281 with Ottawa. Zibanejad was honored in a pregame ceremony with a video narrated by his wife, Irma, and presented a silver stick along with a mini version for their young daughter, Ella.

Up next

Senators: Visit the Detroit Red Wings on Tuesday night in a matchup of Eastern Conference teams fighting to make the playoffs.

Rangers: Visit the Toronto Maple Leafs on Wednesday night.

AP NHL:https://apnews.com/hub/NHL

Senators boost their playoff push by beating the Rangers 2-1

NEW YORK (AP) — Shane Pinto scored on the power play, Warren Foegele added his fifth goal in nine gamessince being traded...

 

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