On Friday night, an Alaska Airlines flight bound for Ontario, California landed back at Portland International Airport in Oregon just 20 minutes after take off. In those eventful 20 minutes, a chunk of the plane’s body — or fuselage, in aviation parlance — came loose and was ripped off while flying at 16,000 feet, leaving the aircraft wide open to the skies.
Incredibly, all 177 people on board were unharmed. But during the fracas, small items — and one shirt — were sucked out of the plane via the gaping hole, including a cell phone found on an Oregon roadside.
Twitter/X user Sean Bates discovered the iPhone on the side of the road at took to the platform to share his find, noting it apparently wasn’t even the first phone found from the ordeal:
Found an iPhone on the side of the road… Still in airplane mode with half a battery and open to a baggage claim for #AlaskaAirlines ASA1282 Survived a 16,000 foot drop perfectly in tact!
When I called it in, Zoe at @NTSB said it was the SECOND phone to be found. No door yet pic.twitter.com/CObMikpuFd
— Seanathan Bates (@SeanSafyre) January 7, 2024
The phone was “perfectly in tact [sic],” wrote Bates, was still in Airplane Mode and even had 50% of its battery life left. The one imperfection was the ripped charging cord dongle still stuck in the phone’s charging port.
In case you didn't see it, there was a broken-off charger plug still inside it! Thing got *yanked* out the door
(Sorry I didn't get a better pic before handing it over haha) pic.twitter.com/tMQ7XQNHeW— Seanathan Bates (@SeanSafyre) January 8, 2024
The intact phone was a fun find but the most sought-out relic from the ordeal was the missing piece of fuselage, which Portland, Oregon science teacher Bob Sauer found in his backyard Sunday night. The National Transportation Security Board (NTSB) took it from there, sharing photos of the missing piece — a door plug — on Twitter/X:
NTSB has recovered the door plug from Alaska Airlines Flight 1282 Boeing 737-9 MAX. NTSB investigators are currently examining the door plug and will send it to the NTSB Materials Laboratory in Washington, DC for further examination. pic.twitter.com/fqeemNeBPW
— NTSB Newsroom (@NTSB_Newsroom) January 8, 2024
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) ordered all U.S. airlines to stop using some Boeing 737 Max 9 planes until the mid-cabin door plugs can be inspected. The order impacts about 171 planes in U.S. fleets, including 65 owned by Alaska Airlines.
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Twitter/X user Jon Ostrower took to the platform with the question we’re all probably thinking: Who makes the phone case?
Who makes the phone case? https://t.co/rG7M71hR8n
— Jon Ostrower (@jonostrower) January 8, 2024
No case manufacturers have come forward to take credit yet, but we’ll update you if they do (and upgrade our phone cases!).
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iPhone from Alaska Airlines flight found intact after 16,000-foot drop originally appeared on Simplemost.com, helping make the most out of life.
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