Published: 5 May 2026. The English Chronicle Desk. The English Chronicle Online
In what aviation experts are calling a “miraculous” avoid-of-disaster, a United Airlines Boeing 767 arriving from Venice, Italy, struck a light pole and a delivery truck on the New Jersey Turnpike while on its final approach to Newark Liberty International Airport Sunday afternoon.
Shocking dashcam footage released Monday shows the moment Flight UA169, carrying 221 passengers and 10 crew members, drifted dangerously low. The plane’s landing gear tire smashed through the windshield of a tractor-trailer belonging to H&S Bakery, sending glass shards flying as the driver, Warren Boardley, was heard singing along to the radio just seconds before the impact.
The incident occurred around 2:00 PM local time as the aircraft crossed over one of the most congested stretches of highway in the United States.
The Triple Collision: Preliminary reports from the FAA and New Jersey State Police indicate the underside of the plane and its landing gear first clipped a highway lamppost. The pole then swung into a nearby Jeep, while the plane’s tire made direct contact with the truck’s cab.
The “Silent” Landing: Remarkably, recordings from LiveATC.net suggest that neither the pilots nor air traffic control were immediately aware the plane had hit anything. The 767 landed “normally” on Runway 22L and taxied to the gate, where ground crews later discovered a hole in the aircraft’s fuselage.
The Only Injury: The truck driver, Boardley, was treated for non-life-threatening cuts to his arm and hand from the shattered glass. He has since been released from the hospital. No injuries were reported among the 231 people on board the aircraft.
The collision has reignited a fierce debate over the “resilience deficit” of airports located in dense urban corridors.
The “Flare” Theory: Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy suggested that gusty winds might have forced the pilots to “flare up” late, causing the tail and landing gear to dip lower than intended—a “human-machine coordination” challenge in unpredictable weather.
The “Accountability Rot”: Critics are questioning why a heavy commercial jet was low enough to strike a vehicle on a public road. The NTSB has launched a rigorous investigation, seizing the cockpit voice and flight data recorders to determine if “pilot error” or a “mechanical milestone” was at play.
The “Hormuz” of Highways: Much like the Strait of Hormuz conflict has tightened global shipping, this incident has highlighted the “fragility” of the NJ Turnpike, where thousands of vehicles pass under low-flying jets every hour.
For the passengers on UA169, the “golden tone” of a safe landing was nearly a tragedy.
Crew Removed: United Airlines has removed the flight crew from service pending the results of the “rigorous safety investigation.”
Maintenance Evaluation: The aircraft sustained minor damage but remains grounded as engineers evaluate the structural integrity of the gear and underside.
As the RHS Wisley wisteria blooms and the Southbank Centre celebrates 75 years of progress, the Newark “near-miss” serves as a sobering reminder of the razor-thin margins in modern aviation.
“The driver is incredibly lucky to be alive,” said one Port Authority official. “If that gear had been six inches lower, we’d be looking at a very different headline.” With the King’s Speech on May 13 expected to address “Global Infrastructure Security,” the Newark incident will likely be cited as a prime example of why the “clinical silence” regarding highway-airport proximity needs to end.



























































































