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Pilots On Commercial Flight Hear Banging On Cockpit Door, Make Abrupt Emergency Landing
A Los Angeles-bound American Airlines flight, operated by SkyWest Airlines, made an emergency landing shortly after take-off due to the pilots fearing someone was attempting to break into the cockpit.
American Airlines Flight 6469 abruptly returned to Omaha, Nebraska, minutes after departure.
The pilots lost contact with the flight crew and heard banging on the cockpit door.
“All of a sudden, we started banking around the city of Omaha. And, you know, you’re tilting the wings and everything,” a passenger traveling with his wife and seven-year-old daughter told CNN.
“My wife noticed that the stewardess was kind of banging on the cockpit door, like, OK, what’s going on?” he added.
Police boarded the plane after it safely landed in Omaha.
Alert 2: 4501 Abbott Drive. Eppley Airfield. Flight SKW6469 enroute to LA from Omaha is enroute back to Eppley after a report of multiple people that were trying to breach the cockpit. OFD: E21 E2 E5 T21 R33 B1 B2 M20Time Out: 18:56 pic.twitter.com/jrV9JP5iJP
— Omaha Scanner (@omaha_scanner) October 21, 2025
CNN shared:
Passengers were not told anything about what was happening until police boarded the plane after landing.
“Everybody was really calm. I guess nobody knew what was happening, so it was probably a good thing,” Gruver said.
The Embraer ERJ 175 regional jet parked away from the terminal with two firetrucks surrounding it, a photo showed.
“After landing, it was determined there was a problem with the inter-phone system and the flight crew was knocking on the cockpit door,” the FAA said in a statement.
SkyWest confirmed a problem with “a flight crew mic,” Tuesday, adding “we apologize for the inconvenience.”
The flight finally took back off for Los Angeles nearly five hours late, according to FlightAware.
Watch footage from the flight below:
An American Airlines flight bound for Los Angeles made an emergency landing in Nebraska after the pilots believed someone was trying to break into the cockpit, authorities and the airline reported.
They later clarified that it was a false alarm caused by a technical problem in… pic.twitter.com/Yg9XqbXmvP
— FL360aero (@fl360aero) October 21, 2025
More from the New York Post:
The captain later apologized to passengers as soon as the misunderstanding was cleared up, ABC7 reported.
“We weren’t sure if something was going on with the airplane, so that’s why we’re coming back here,” the captain said over the intercom, according to passengers.
“It’s gonna be a little bit. We have to figure out what’s going on.”
The plane, an Embraer ERJ 175, was only 40 miles into the 1,300-mile journey when the mishap unfolded, according to the flight tracking website FlightAware.