Regulations & Safety
Southwest Airlines Aircraft Struck by Ground Vehicle at Memphis
A ground equipment vehicle hit a Southwest Airlines jet during boarding at Memphis Airport on June 21, 2026, causing a 4-hour delay.

This is a developing story. Information may change as official details are released.
This article summarizes reporting by Fox News Digital and WREG Memphis.
A ground equipment vehicle struck a Southwest Airlines aircraft during passenger boarding at Memphis International Airport (MEM) on June 21, 2026, forcing the carrier to remove the jet from service for safety inspections.
The incident resulted in no reported injuries among passengers or crew. According to reporting by Fox News Digital, travelers on Flight 4013 were accommodated on an alternate aircraft and reached their destination approximately four hours behind schedule.
Ramp incident and operational recovery
The collision occurred while passengers were actively boarding the aircraft. A Southwest Airlines spokesperson confirmed to Fox News Digital that a ground vehicle contacted the jet, prompting the airline to immediately pull the aircraft from the active schedule to undergo mandatory safety evaluations.
The Memphis Shelby County Airport Authority acknowledged the event, describing it in a statement as an isolated incident at the Tennessee facility. Following the collision, Southwest arranged for a replacement aircraft to complete the flight.
Reports indicate a discrepancy regarding the flight’s final destination. While a company representative told Fox News Digital the replacement flight was bound for Dallas, the airline’s website showed Flight 4013 continuing service to Harry Reid International Airport (LAS) in Las Vegas. The delayed flight ultimately arrived at approximately 5:30 p.m. local time, well past its original 1:50 p.m. scheduled arrival.
Safety investigations and industry context
Southwest Airlines stated that the collision will be reviewed through its internal Safety Management System. The carrier emphasized in a statement that customer and employee safety remains its highest priority. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) routinely monitors and may independently investigate ramp collisions involving commercial aircraft and ground support equipment.
Ground safety remains a persistent operational challenge at major commercial airports. Collisions involving baggage carts, catering trucks, and pushback tractors frequently result in costly aircraft damage and significant schedule disruptions, even when no injuries occur.
AirPro News analysis
We note that this ramp incident comes during a period of significant operational transition for Southwest Airlines. In 2026, the carrier is executing a major strategy reset, which includes the elimination of its legacy open-seating policy and the reduction of 11 international routes. While ground equipment collisions are generally isolated events managed by local station operations, any aircraft taken out of service out of base places immediate pressure on fleet utilization. The swift deployment of a replacement aircraft at MEM indicates the airline maintained sufficient operational slack to recover the flight, albeit with a four-hour delay.
Sources: Fox News Digital, WREG Memphis, MiGFlug
Photo Credit: X
Regulations & Safety
EASA Grounds 5 Airbus A380s Over Wing Mid Spar Cracks
EASA Emergency AD 2026-0119-E mandates urgent wing inspections on 16 A380s, grounding five before next flight.

This is a developing story. Information may change as official details are released.
This is original reporting and analysis by AirPro News.
The European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) has mandated urgent inspections of 16 Airbus A380 aircraft, requiring five of the superjumbos to be grounded before their next flight following the discovery of wing mid spar cracks.
Emergency Airworthiness Directive 2026-0119-E, issued on June 22, 2026, takes effect on June 24, 2026. The regulatory action primarily affects the United Arab Emirates-based carrier Emirates (EK), which operates 15 of the flagged airframes, alongside a single aircraft operated by Australia’s Qantas Airways (QF).
Regulatory requirements and compliance timelines
EASA has divided the affected Airbus A380 fleet into two compliance categories based on manufacturer serial numbers. Operators of the five aircraft designated as Group 1 must complete the mandated wing inspections before the aircraft’s next flight. The remaining 11 aircraft, classified as Group 2, must undergo inspections within 25 flight cycles.
The directive permits limited operational flexibility for repositioning. Operators may conduct ferry flights to move Group 1 aircraft to maintenance facilities, provided these flights do not exceed three flight cycles, carry no passengers, and do not utilize Extended Operations (ETOPS) procedures.
Regardless of the inspection findings, airlines are required to report all results back to Airbus within seven days of completing the checks.
Operator impact and structural concerns
The emergency directive places an immediate operational burden on Emirates, the world’s largest operator of the Airbus A380. With 15 aircraft requiring specialized structural checks, the carrier faces potential scheduling and fleet utilization disruptions.
Conversely, the single Qantas aircraft affected by the directive, registered as VH-OQI, is already undergoing scheduled heavy maintenance in Dresden, Germany. This positioning ensures the Australian flag carrier will avoid immediate flight schedule impacts.
The regulatory action stems from ongoing monitoring of the aircraft’s structural health. In the directive, EASA stated the safety rationale clearly.
Following the review of the results of those inspections, it has been determined that the cracks found on certain aeroplanes could reduce the structural integrity of the wing.
AirPro News analysis
We note that wing spar cracking remains a persistent maintenance challenge for the global Airbus A380 fleet as the airframes age. This latest emergency directive builds upon previous regulatory actions, including EASA AD 2025-0280, which established repetitive inspection protocols for wing middle and outer rear spars. The escalation to a before-next-flight grounding for five specific airframes indicates that fatigue data or recent inspection findings have exceeded the manufacturer’s predictive models for those specific serial numbers. We expect regulatory scrutiny of the A380’s wing structures to remain stringent as the active fleet continues to accumulate flight cycles.
Photo Credit: Airbus
Regulations & Safety
NTSB Warns First Responders on Ballistic Parachute Hazards
NTSB Safety Alert SA-102 warns first responders that undeployed BPRS rockets on downed aircraft can fire at any time.

The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) is urging first responders to exercise extreme caution around downed aircraft equipped with ballistic parachute recovery systems (BPRS), warning that undeployed rocket mechanisms pose a severe risk of injury or death during rescue operations.
Following the issuance of Safety Alert SA-102 on January 20, 2026, the NTSB released a supplementary educational video on June 18, 2026, to amplify its safety campaign. The agency noted that while systems like the Cirrus Airframe Parachute System (CAPS) are designed to save lives in flight, “they pose a hazard to first responders at an accident site if the rocket did not activate before or during ground impact.”
Hidden hazards in the wreckage
First responders frequently need to extricate occupants from deformed fuselages following an aviation accident. The NTSB warned that the activation cable running along the airframe of a BPRS-equipped aircraft may be under tension and near its breaking point due to crash damage. Any sudden movement or structural cutting could inadvertently trigger the solid-propellant rocket.
If you must cut through the fuselage to free an occupant, avoid cutting the activation cable of the BPRS. If you need to cut the cable, be aware that this could activate the rocket.
The agency explicitly advised emergency personnel to contact the NTSB before attempting to disable any undeployed parachute systems, as the rocket can fire at any time if the system is compromised.
Historical precedent and emergency protocols
The safety alert cited three specific accident investigations where undeployed BPRS rockets created immediate hazards for ground personnel.
On February 16, 2016, an Evolution Revo crashed near Buckeye, Arizona. First responders operated around the wreckage for an hour before a Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) inspector alerted them to the active rocket hazard. On March 28, 2021, a Cirrus SR22 GTS crashed near Marana, Arizona. The pilot attempted an in-flight deployment that malfunctioned, leaving the rocket potentially active on the ground. On March 20, 2025, a Cirrus SR22 crashed near LaFayette, Georgia. In that accident, the BPRS rocket activated several minutes after the crash while emergency crews were positioned near the burning aircraft.
To mitigate these risks, the NTSB mandates that first responders immediately contact its 24/7 Response Operations Center at 844-373-9922 upon identifying a BPRS at an accident site.
AirPro News analysis
We note that as manufacturers like Cirrus Aircraft and BRS Aerospace continue to popularize whole-airframe parachutes, the intersection of aviation safety and local emergency response becomes increasingly complex. Local fire and rescue departments are typically the first to arrive at general aviation accident sites, yet they may lack specialized training on aircraft-specific ballistic hazards. The NTSB’s ongoing educational campaign, culminating in the June 2026 video release, underscores a critical gap in cross-disciplinary safety protocols that the aviation industry must actively help close to protect ground personnel.
Sources: National Transportation Safety Board
Photo Credit: NTSB
Regulations & Safety
Ubisoft Co-Founder Claude Guillemot Killed in France Plane Crash
Claude Guillemot, Ubisoft co-founder and EVP of Operations, died June 19 in a Cessna 421 crash near La Baule, France.

This is a developing story. Information may change as official details are released.
This article summarizes reporting by AP News by Angela Charlton, with additional corporate statements reported by Forbes.
Claude Guillemot, a co-founder of the global video game publisher Ubisoft Entertainment SA, and an unnamed flight instructor were killed on June 19, 2026, when their twin-engine Cessna 421 crashed during final approach to La Baule-Escoublac Airports in western France.
The 69-year-old executive served as Ubisoft’s Executive Vice President of Operations and Chairman of Guillemot Corporation SA. According to reporting by AP News, the aircraft was traveling from Rennes to La Baule for a weekend aviation gathering when it went down in a field near the airport and caught fire.
Flight and investigation details
The flight originated in Rennes on Friday evening. Local authorities confirmed two fatalities at the scene, identified as Guillemot and the flight instructor. Guillemot owned the Cessna 421 and was a licensed, experienced pilot. He was reportedly traveling to the Atlantic coast to participate in a private aviation event expected to draw over a hundred aircraft.
The Bureau d’Enquêtes et d’Analyses pour la Sécurité de l’Aviation Civile (BEA), alongside French judicial authorities, has initiated an investigation into the accident. The official cause of the crash has not been determined. Because both occupants were licensed pilots, investigators have not yet confirmed whether Guillemot or the instructor was at the controls at the time of the accident.
Ubisoft confirms executive death
Guillemot was one of five brothers who founded the video game publisher in 1986. The company has since grown into a major international developer, known for highly successful franchises including Assassin’s Creed. On June 20, 2026, Ubisoft released an official statement confirming the loss of its co-founder.
“Ubisoft was deeply saddened to learn of the death of Claude Guillemot, co-founder of the group and chairman of Guillemot Corp., in an accident. Our thoughts are with his family and loved ones during this difficult time. No further statements will be made at this time.”
AirPro News analysis
The loss of a founding executive and operational leader presents an immediate transition requirement for Ubisoft and Guillemot Corporation. While corporate succession plans have not been publicly detailed following the accident, the sudden departure of a key figure who has been with the company since its 1986 inception will require the board to stabilize operational oversight. We expect the BEA investigation to follow standard protocols for general aviation accidents, focusing on weather conditions, aircraft maintenance records, and pilot inputs during the critical final approach phase.
Sources: AP News
Photo Credit: AP News
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