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JetBlue planes hit each other on ground at Boston’s Logan Airport

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2 JetBlue planes damaged after bumping into each other at Boston’s Logan Airport


2 JetBlue planes damaged after bumping into each other at Boston’s Logan Airport

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BOSTON – Two JetBlue planes hit each other on the ground at Logan Airport in Boston early Thursday morning.

A spokesperson for Massport, which runs the airport, told WBZ-TV the two jets “made contact” while in the de-icing area.

“One wingtip touched another plane’s tail. No injuries, but both flights cancelled,” the spokesperson said, calling the incident “very minor.”

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One of the two JetBlue planes damaged in the collision at Logan Airport on February 8, 2024.

Ryan Bates


According to the Federal Aviation Administration, the left winglet – the little wing at the end of the plane’s wing used to reduce drag – of one plane hit the horizontal stabilizer at the back of another jet around 6:40 a.m.

One flight, JetBlue Flight 777, was heading to Las Vegas at 6 a.m. The other, JetBlue Flight 551, was leaving for Orlando, Florida at the same time. 

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Damage from one of the two JetBlue planes after a collision at Logan Airport on February 8, 2024.

Ryan Bates


“The event happened in an area of the tarmac that is controlled by the airline,” FAA spokesperson Elizabeth Isham Cory said in a statement.

“No injuries were reported by customers or crewmembers on either aircraft,” JetBlue said in a statement to WBZ. “Both aircraft will be taken out of service for repairs, and JetBlue flight 777 to Las Vegas and JetBlue flight 551 to Orlando will operate on other aircraft. Safety is JetBlue’s priority, and we will work to determine how and why this incident occurred.”

Mary Menna was on the Las Vegas flight, heading to the Super Bowl.

“We had a little collision,” she told WBZ NewsRadio in Boston. “It was a bump. Like it wasn’t a huge crash. You felt it, you felt the jolt, but it wasn’t extreme and then everybody was just like (gasp) and we looked out the window and saw that we had come very close to that other plane and, in fact, tore off part of its wing.”

“The plane we were in had some structural damage in our wing, but our wing was still intact, but there was definitely, it wouldn’t have been able to fly,” Menna said. 

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