On October 27, 2016, about 1942 eastern daylight time, Eastern Air Lines flight 3452, a Boeing 737-
700, N923CL, overran runway 22 during the landing roll at LaGuardia Airport (KLGA), Flushing,
Queens, New York. The airplane traveled through the right forward corner of the engineered materials
arresting system (EMAS) at the departure end of the runway and came to rest off the right side of the
EMAS. The 2 certificated airline transport pilots, 7 cabin crewmembers, and 39 passengers were not
injured and evacuated the airplane via airstairs. The airplane sustained minor damage. The charter flight
was operating under the provisions of 14 Code of Federal Regulations Part 121. Night instrument flight
rules conditions prevailed at the airport at the time of the incident, and an instrument flight rules flight
plan was filed for the flight, which originated at Fort Dodge Regional Airport (KFOD), Fort Dodge,
Iowa, about 1623 central daylight time.
Download the final report from CAROL.
See the photos on Flickr
We determined the probable cause(s) of this incident to be: The first officer's failure to attain the proper touchdown point and the flight crew's failure to call for a go-around, which resulted in the airplane landing more than halfway down the runway. Contributing to the incident were, the first officer's initiation of the landing flare at a relatively high altitude and his delay in reducing the throttles to idle, the captain's delay in manually deploying the speed brakes after touchdown, the captain's lack of command authority, and a lack of robust training provided by the operator to support the flight crew's decision-making concerning when to call for a go-around.