Air Canada flight diverts to Boston after captain's midair medical emergency
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Topics in This Edition
Summary
CBC News segment covers Air Canada Flight AC7664 (operated by PAL Airlines) from Newark to Halifax on June 24, 2026, which diverted to Boston after the captain suffered a medical emergency in the cockpit. The co-pilot assumed control and landed safely with 61 passengers aboard. Passenger Rodney McDonald describes the plane jolting violently, the captain being dragged from the cockpit by a flight attendant, flailing and hollering, and passengers helping restrain him for about 40 minutes. Air Canada confirms standard protocols were followed. Aviation safety expert David McNair comments on the importance of two pilots. The captain received treatment in Boston; passengers reboarded and reached Halifax later that evening.
Editorial Assessment
The broadcast accurately reports a verified incident supported by Air Canada statements and consistent passenger accounts in multiple outlets. It provides useful context on two-pilot crews and training. Viewer perception could be shaped by the dramatic passenger narrative, which aligns with other reports but lacks independent confirmation of details like exact duration of restraint. No counter-evidence or official medical diagnosis is included, as none has been publicly released. The piece balances safety reassurance with acknowledgment of the frightening experience onboard.
Key Moments
Air Canada flight bound for Halifax diverted to Boston after captain's medical emergency; co-pilot landed safely
Confirmed by Air Canada statement and FAA reports; flight AC7664 operated by PAL Airlines from Newark.
Plane jolted violently several times; cockpit door flew open; flight attendant dragged incapacitated captain out by armpits
Passenger Rodney McDonald account corroborated in ABC News, WCVB, and CBC reporting.
Captain was kicking, flailing, and hollering; passengers helped restrain him
McDonald and other passenger descriptions match across ABC, Global News, and NY Post coverage; described as apparent seizure.
Benefit of two pilots proven; crews train specifically for such incidents
Air Canada statement and expert David McNair comments align with standard aviation safety protocols.
Sources Consulted
- Passengers restrain pilot during apparent medical emergency on terrifying flight
- Air Canada flight diversion to Boston was due to pilot 'medical issue'
- 'He was kicking and flailing': Passenger recounts scary moments on diverted Air Canada flight
- Passenger describes helping pilot as medical emergency diverts plane to Logan
- Incapacitated' pilot pulled from cockpit as Air Canada flight out of NJ diverts
- Air Canada flight diverts to Boston after captain suffers medical emergency