The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board has opened an investigation into a near-collision involving two commercial passenger aircraft at Boston Logan International Airport.
According to Jin10, the NTSB announced on June 22 (local time) that it was investigating the incident, and the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration has also begun its own review.
The incident occurred on June 20, when a Delta Air Lines Airbus A319 arriving to land aborted its approach and executed a go-around to avoid an American Airlines Boeing 737-800 that was taking off from a crossing runway.
A Delta spokesperson said the A319 was operating Flight 2351 from Dallas with 129 passengers and six crew members. The aircraft later landed safely and passengers disembarked normally.
American Airlines had not responded publicly to the incident at the time of the report.
The U.S. Senate was scheduled to hold a hearing on June 23 focused on near-miss incidents and runway incursions at major airports nationwide, with this event listed as a case for discussion.
NTSB Investigates Near-Collision Between Delta And American Airlines Jets At Boston Logan
2026-06-23 12:30:45
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