A newly surfaced air traffic control recording is shedding light on the final, chaotic seconds before a runway collision at LaGuardia Airport — and it paints a picture of urgency, confusion, and a situation that escalated far too quickly to stop.
According to the audio now circulating online, what began as a routine instruction to a ground vehicle quickly turned into a desperate attempt to prevent disaster.
Controllers can first be heard calmly issuing clearance:
“Truck 1 and Company… cross Runway 4 at Delta.”
Moments later, that calm disappears.
“Stop, stop, stop, stop! Truck 1, stop!”
The urgency in the controller’s voice is unmistakable — a rapid shift from routine coordination to crisis response in a matter of seconds.
At the same time, nearby aircraft were being instructed to halt or change course:
“Frontier 4195, just stop there, please.”
“Delta 2603, go around.”
“Runway is closed… LaGuardia Airport is closed.”
Then, a chilling confirmation:
“I see you collide with a vehicle.”
The aircraft involved was a Bombardier CRJ900 operated by Air Canada, arriving from Montreal with roughly 80 to 100 passengers onboard. Data indicates the jet was taxiing at approximately 24 mph when it struck the ground vehicle just before 11:40 p.m.
Initial reports suggest the vehicle — a fire truck responding to another incident — had been granted permission to cross the runway. However, something went wrong in the critical timing of that clearance, prompting controllers to issue urgent stop commands that came too late.
Authorities have confirmed that at least four people were critically injured, including two members of the Port Authority Police Department assigned to firefighter duties. Both were transported to hospital, and their conditions remain serious.
There are also early reports, cited by NBC News, indicating that two pilots may have been killed in the crash, though full confirmation is still pending as investigators verify details.

In the aftermath, the Federal Aviation Administration ordered a complete halt to operations at LaGuardia, grounding flights and triggering widespread disruption. At least 18 flights were diverted to nearby hubs, including John F. Kennedy International Airport and Newark Liberty International Airport.
Weather conditions at the time were reportedly poor, adding another layer of complexity to an already fragile situation involving aircraft movement and ground coordination.
Images from the scene show the aircraft stationary on the runway with visible damage to its forward section, surrounded by emergency vehicles and flashing lights — a stark reminder of how narrow the margin for error can be in aviation.
Now, investigators are focused on reconstructing those final seconds:
Was the runway clearance miscommunicated?
Did visibility or timing play a decisive role?
And why did the stop commands come only moments before impact?
For now, the audio stands as a haunting record — not just of what happened, but of how quickly control can slip, even in one of the most tightly regulated environments in the world.