A STOWAWAY crocodile on a flight escaped from its carrier bag and sparked an onboard stampede that caused the flight to crash, killing 19 passengers and crew. The croc had been hidden in a passenger’s sports bag – allegedly with plans to sell it – but it tore loose and ran amok, sparking panic.

A stampede of terrified passengers caused the small aircraft to lose balance and tip over in mid-air during an internal flight in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The unbalanced load caused the aircraft, on a routine flight from the capital, Kinshasa, to the regional airport at Bandundu, to go into a spin and crash into a house. A lone survivor from the Let 410 plane told the astonishing tale to investigators.

Ironically the crocodile also survived the crash but was later killed with a machete by rescuers sifting through the wreckage. British pilot Chris Wilson, 39, from Shurdington, near Cheltenham, Glocs was acting as the plane’s first officer alongside Belgian pilot Danny Philemotte, 62, who was owner of the plane’s operator Filair.

The plane smashed into an empty house just a few hundred metres from its destination.

“According to the inquiry report and the testimony of the only survivor, the crash happened because of a panic sparked by the escape of a crocodile hidden in a sports bag,” news organisation Jeune Afrique reported. “The terrified air hostess hurried towards the cockpit, followed by the passengers.”

The plane was then sent off-balance “despite the desperate efforts of the pilot”, said the report.

“The crocodile survived the crash before being cut up with a machete.”

I dunno, this sounds more like a crock…….wait awhile.




  1. Tom Woolf says:

    We (well, somebody) will be reading about this in the National Enquirer next week.

  2. Animby - just phoning it in says:

    Could happen. Especially since he was just a few hundred meters form the destination. That means he was flying low and slow. A sudden massive shift in balance? Like I said, it could happen. The Let is a Czech aircraft with a dubious safety record, anyway. When I was working in Africa, I had to fly on them four or five times. Bad times.

    On the bullshit side of the meter though, the same airline had another Let 410 crash last month killing 20 people. It ran out of fuel in bad weather a few hundred meters short of the airport. Coincidence or bullshit?

  3. MikeN says:

    Crocodiles on planes is not unusual there.

  4. bobbo, I don't know says:

    This made me laugh: “The L-410 first flew in 1969, and with more than 1100 produced, is the most popular 19-seat plane in history.[1][2]” ((the 19 seat qualifier))

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Let_L-410_Turbolet

    First I’ve heard of a turbolet, ((not a turbojet.))

  5. admfubar says:

    #1 you mean ‘Weekly World News’, and it will be “Bat Boy’s” gator.

  6. Bob says:

    The croc was killed by a machete wielding rescuer? Scary. And I love Aussie news calls it a stampede. A stampede of one croc!

    I believe the B.S. meter is pegged at: ‘What a croc!’

  7. Luc says:

    So the croc was imprisoned, then murdered? Why? Typical of man towards innocent creatures. Barbaric hoomans.

  8. zalo says:

    “I have had it with these motherfucking crocs on this motherfucking plane!” -SLJ

  9. McCoy Pauley says:

    How you say “Let’s roll!” in Crocodile, huh?

  10. Yankinwaoz says:

    Damn! #8 beat me to it.

  11. highaman says:

    You had me at “Congo”. If there were any survivors they would tell that a shaman turned into a crocodile just before landing…

  12. Gildersleeve says:

    The only reason this story has any credibility is the fact that there ARE idiots in the world that keep reptiles as pets.

  13. ECA says:

    I have to ask…
    HOW big of a croc can you get in a Duffel bag?

    2-4′ ???

    Even a 6′ would be fairly EASY to control..PILE ON a few people and its held pretty well.

  14. The0ne says:

    I believe it. Stupid people in a private plane owned by someone. At this point I think this same thing would happen if someone toss a bong out in the open.


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