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Southwest flight plummets nearly 500 feet ‘in a free fall’ to avoid ‘midair collision,’ leaving 2 flight attendants injured

  • Writer: WGON
    WGON
  • Jul 26, 2025
  • 2 min read

Two flight attendants were injured after a commercial Southwest Airlines jet suddenly dropped 475 feet to avoid a “midair collision” shortly after takeoff at a Los Angeles-area

airport Friday, with one frightened passenger saying the aircraft “was just in a freefall.”


Southwest Flight 1496 dove from 14,100 feet to 13,625 feet just six minutes after taking off from Hollywood Burbank Airport, according to FlightRadar24 data.


The pilot told concerned flyers that the drastic maneuver was carried out to avoid “a midair collision,” passenger Steve Ulasewicz told ABC News.

“The plane was just in a free fall. It was pandemonium,” he told NBC 4 Los Angeles.


Passengers screamed as the plane dropped for what felt like 10 seconds, according to Ulasewicz.


Comedian Jimmy Dore was on the flight, relaying that he and several other flyers were tossed about the cabin during the startling descent.


“Pilot had to dive aggressively to avoid midair collision over Burbank airport,” he wrote on X after landing in Sin City.


“Myself & Plenty of people flew out of their seats & bumped heads on ceiling, a flight attendant needed medical attention,” the California-based funnyman, 60, said.


Dore’s manager was also on the plane and was floored by the near-catastrophe.


Tracking data showed that the plane — moving at 450 mph — proceeded to climb 20 seconds after the initial and sharp decline.


Southwest said two flight attendants were injured during the desperate life-saving swerve, but no passengers were injured.


Another plane, a Hawker Hunter aircraft, was near the Southwest plane at approximately 14,633 feet, according to ABC News.


The pilots of the Hawker Hunter reported having the Boeing 737 in sight, but were not properly instructed by air traffic control, ABC News reported, citing sources.


Multiple Hawker Hunters — a British-designed, fixed-wing military-style aircraft — were being operated in the area, according to the outlet.


Southwest said in a statement that its pilots were responding to two onboard traffic alerts and that the descent action was to “comply” with those warnings.


The pilot told passengers in an onboard update after the scare that the plane used software to make the evasive move, Ulasewicz told NBC.


The plane continued to its Las Vegas destination without further incident, Southwest said.


“We appreciate the professionalism of our Flight Crew and Flight Attendants in responding to this event. Nothing is more important to Southwest than the Safety of our Customers and Employees,” it said in a statement.


Another commercial airliner narrowly avoided a midair collision over North Dakota earlier this week when a quick-thinking Delta airline pilot made an “aggressive maneuver” to avoid hitting a B-52 Bomber.

 
 
 

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