World News

Sudden nosedive of Boeing 787 that injured 50 may have been from flight attendant accidentally hitting a cockpit button: report

The terrifying nosedive of a Latam Airlines Boeing 787 flight that left at least 50 people injured may have been caused by a flight attendant accidentally flicking a switch in the cockpit, according to a report Friday.

The clumsy crew member appears to have inadvertently hit the switch on the pilot’s seat while serving a mid-flight meal, US aviation industry officials briefed on preliminary evidence from the investigation told the Wall Street Journal.

That pushed the pilot into the controls — thrusting down the nose of the plane, leaving some of the 263 passengers and nine crew members flying into the ceiling and fearing the jet was dropping out of the sky, the report said.

Video posted online from the flight showed one person lying unconscious in the middle of the aisle. Supplied to NZ Herald
Others held their heads in apparent pain and shock. Supplied to NZ Herald

The flipped seat switch explanation appears to echo reporting by the aviation industry publication Air Current, which cited a senior airline safety official as saying that the movement of a seat on the flight deck caused “the nose down” angle for the plane.

The pilot ultimately recovered control of the plummeting aircraft and landed it safely in New Zealand.

Boeing on Thursday issued a memo to airlines operating its 787 jets, recommending that they check the cockpit seats for loose covers on the switches — and instructing them how to cut power to the motorized pilot chairs if needed.

“Closing the spring-loaded seat back switch guard onto a loose/detached rocker switch cap can potentially jam the rocker switch, resulting in unintended seat movement,” according to the memo viewed by the WSJ.

Boeing did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Friday. A spokesperson for LATAM would only tell The Post that the airline “continues to work in coordination with the authorities in order to support the ongoing investigation.”

The Chile-based airline previously said the Dreamliner suffered a “technical event during the flight which caused strong movement.”

It later said the plane “experienced a strong shake during flight, the cause of which is currently under investigation.”

Shaken passengers had previously described the harrowing ordeal, the aftermath of which was captured on video showing a woman lying apparently unconscious in the middle aisle, and others holding their heads in pain.

The Latam Airlines flight landed in Auckland, New Zealand, around 4 p.m. local time, but passengers said they were not transported to local hotels until around 2 a.m. the next day. AFP via Getty Images

“The plane, unannounced, just dropped. I mean it dropped unlike anything I’ve ever experienced on any kind of minor turbulence, and people were thrown out of their seats, hit the top of the roof of the plane, thrown down the aisles,” passenger Brian Jokat told ABC News in Australia.

“Some of the roof panels were broken from people being thrown up and knocking through the plastic roof panels in the aisle ways. And there was blood coming from several people’s heads.”

Clara Azevedo, from Brisbane, Australia, said she wound up helping a fellow passenger who broke two ribs and injured her shoulder because the woman did not speak English, and LATAM Airlines didn’t have translators.

“We were all traumatized and we had to find strength to help people out,” she told the New Zealand Herald.

Fifty people were injured after the Boeing jet suddenly lost altitude. Brian Adam Jokat via REUTERS

About 50 people were treated at the scene for mostly minor injuries, while 13 were hospitalized.

Of the 13, the majority were discharged a short time later, and only one passenger and one crew member required additional medical attention, according to the airline.

Passengers later claimed the airline ignored them for several hours after the nightmarish flight — and then offered each a single McDonald’s cheeseburger as they waited at the Auckland terminal.

“Accidents happen, but the way they treat us, that’s not what it’s supposed to be,” Thais Iwamoto complained to The Herald. 

New Zealand’s Transport Accident Investigation Commission said on Tuesday it was seizing the cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder of the flight, which would provide information about the conversations between the pilots and the plane’s movement.