Passenger on flipped Delta jet recalls being upside down and 'hanging from our seat belts'
A passenger aboard the Delta flight that flipped upside down in a crash-landing in Toronto on Monday recalled how within seconds of the wheels touching down, his body was turned fully sideways and he and other passengers were left dangling by their seat belts.
Pete Koukov recorded video of the moment he and other passengers were shuffled out through the emergency exit of the flipped plane onto the tarmac covered in patches of snow at Toronto Pearson International Airport.
"I didn't really notice anything wrong until the moment we hit the ground," Koukov said on the "TODAY" show Tuesday morning. "The wheels touched down ... I was in the window seat on the lookers left side, and then all of a sudden, I just remember being fully sideways."
"I was looking down and just seeing like sparks and flames and whatever was grinding against the ground. It happened pretty dang quick and we were just upside down, hanging from our seat belts," he recalled.
Delta Air Lines said 21 injured passengers were initially transported to local hospitals, and as of Tuesday morning 19 have been released. There were no fatalities in the landing of Flight 4819, and the injuries were relatively minor, officials said. There were 80 people on the plane, 76 passengers and four crew members, Delta said.
The flight was operated by Endeavor Air and had arrived from Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport when it crashed upon landing in Toronto around 2:15 p.m., the Federal Aviation Administration said. Endeavor is a 'wholly owned subsidiary of Delta Air Lines headquartered in Minneapolis,' according to Delta.
Koukov said that he and the other passengers on board were hanging upside down, secured only by their seat belts.
'Obviously we ended up upside down, and everyone was wearing their seat belts as they should have been, including myself,' Koukov said.
'I remember just hanging there and me and the lady next to me, we got out pretty quick. We were kind of able to just like, unclip, like you would, and then just kind of lower ourselves to be on the ground, which was the roof, I guess,' he added. 'We did it really quickly, like, within stopping we both immediately kind of got our bearings, unclipped, got down.'
Passengers were only hanging for about a minute before they were told they could dismount.
'At that point, people were feeling pretty frantic, but everyone was obviously able to get down. Most people needed help, I think, from someone who had already got down, and then we kind of just slowly moved off the plane.'
He commended the flight attendants for a 'pretty organized' evacuation of the plane.
'Everyone got off in a pretty orderly fashion. It didn't seem too insane once the plane had stopped and everyone realized, for the most part, they were OK because no one was seriously injured,' Koukov said.
It's not clear what caused the crash, but at the time wind gusts reached close to 40 mph amid blowing snow and minus 2 degrees wind chill. While lake-effect snow impacted the area earlier in the day, no snow was reported on radars at the time of the accident.
The Transportation Safety Board of Canada will investigate the crash with assistance from the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board.
This article was originally published on NBCNews.com

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