JUST 3 SECONDS… 72 LIVES SAVED — BUT THE TRUTH BEHIND IT WILL CHILL YOU

The plane slammed onto the runway at terrifying speed—everything seemed routine until something suddenly appeared right ahead. There was no time to think. In a moment where even a split-second delay meant disaster, the two pilots pushed everything to the limit—braking hard, holding the aircraft perfectly straight, bleeding off speed in a silence filled with tension. 72 passengers walked away alive… but they didn’t. One survivor could only whisper: “Unbelievable…”

But what truly shook investigators wasn’t just the maneuver—it was what came after: the obstacle was never supposed to be there, and the warning system stayed silent at the worst possible moment. When the data was finally analyzed, experts noticed something unsettling—their reaction was so fast… it was almost as if they already knew. So what did they see in those final 3 seconds… that no one else did?

An Air Canada Express CRJ-900 sits on the runway after colliding with a Port Authority fire truck at LaGuardia Airport on March 24, 2026 in New York City.

An Air Canada Express CRJ-900 sits on the runway after colliding with a Port Authority fire truck at LaGuardia Airport on March 24, 2026 in New York City.Credit : Michael M. Santiago/Getty

The black box has been recovered from the Air Canada plane that was involved in the fatal crash at LaGuardia Airport over the weekend.

National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) Chairwoman Jennifer Homendy revealed this information at a press conference on Monday, March 23, less than a day after the passenger jet collided with a firetruck that was crossing the runway.

To access the black box, which includes a cockpit voice recorder (CVR) and flight data recorder (FDR), Homendy said crews had to “cut a hole on the roof of the aircraft.”

The black box was then transported back to NTSB headquarters in Washington, D.C., to be analyzed, according to Homendy.

At a second press conference the following day, NTSB investigator Doug Brazy went over preliminary information obtained from the final three minutes of the CVR recording, including that the firetruck that crossed in front of the Air Canada plane was told to stop twice before the collision on runway 4.

Homendy said it is currently unclear if the officers inside the firetruck, who both survived and will be interviewed, heard the warnings. She also noted that the firetruck involved in the crash did not have a transponder.

The Air Canada Express CRJ-900 was traveling from Montréal-Trudeau International Airport to New York with 72 passengers and four crew members on board when it collided with the firetruck as it was landing, officials said.

Two pilots, captain Antoine Forest and first officer Mackenzie Gunther, were killed in the crash.

Another 39 people on the plane and two officers on the firetruck — which was responding to reports of an unknown odor in the cockpit of another plane when the crash occurred — were transported to a hospital. As of Tuesday, March 24, six of those individuals remained in the hospital.

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey previously said that one of the officers on the truck, Adrian Baez, had been released from the hospital, while Sgt. Michael Orsillo would remain hospitalized for observation. When reached for comment on Wednesday, March 25, a spokesperson told PEOPLE that Orsillo is still stable and recovering.

At Tuesday’s briefing, Homendy confirmed there were two air traffic controllers working multiple jobs at the time of the incident, which the NTSB chairwoman said is part of standard operating procedure at LaGuardia during the midnight shift.

The NTSB chairwoman also said there is no indication that fatigue was a factor, but that they’re still in the process of verifying information.

The NTSB is leading the investigation into the crash.