American Eagle Flight 5401

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American Eagle Flight 5401
Summary
Date   May 9, 2004
Type   Wind gusts on landing
Site   San Juan, Puerto Rico
Fatalities   0
Injuries   17 (4 serious)
Aircraft
Aircraft type   ATR-72
Operator   American Eagle
Tail number   N438AT
Passengers   22
Crew   4
Survivors   26 (all)

American Eagle flight 5401 was a flight between Eugenio María de Hostos Airport in Mayagüez, Puerto Rico and Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport in San Juan.

On the afternoon of May 9, 2004, Executive Airlines (doing business as American Eagle) flight 5401, an Avions de Transport Regional 72-212, ATR-72 airplane (registered as N438AT) took off from Mayagüez and completed a normal flight to San Juan.

Upon landing, the aircraft skipped once, bounced hard twice, and then crashed at Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport, San Juan, Puerto Rico. The airplane came to a complete stop on a grassy area about 217 feet left of the runway 8 centerline and about 4,317 feet beyond the runway threshold. The captain was seriously injured; the first officer, 2 flight attendants, and 16 of the 22 passengers received minor injuries; and the remaining 6 passengers received no injuries. There were also two stowaways on board who were severely injured, but were able to recover. The captain was the most seriously injured onboard. As it turned out, a team of city rescuers was practicing on the beach located one block away from the airport, and they ran to the scene as soon as the airplane crashed, perhaps helping to save some lives. The airport's fire rescue team also helped in the operation.

Most of the injured were taken either to Carolina area hospitals, or to Centro Médico, in Río Piedras.

The National Transportation Safety Board determined that the cause of the accident was the captain's failure to recover from his bounced landing and his subsequent failure to execute a go-around.

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