A Texas couple was enjoying the views of San Diego County while on vacation to celebrate their wedding anniversary when suddenly, their rental car was slammed from behind not by another vehicle, but by a small airplane that made an emergency landing.
“I think we broke the fall. (The plane) didn’t hit concrete, it hit our car,” Sarah Tribett told NBC San Diego.
Shortly after 12 p.m. Tuesday, a single-engine Piper PA-32 aircraft landed on southbound Interstate 5 near Del Mar, shocking drivers as the plane clipped Tribett’s vehicle before coming to a rest at the freeway divider.
“We were just driving down the freeway and all of a sudden, something hit us really hard and then glass just shattered everywhere,” Tribett recalled. “We’re both OK but it definitely was an interesting experience.”
What began as a romantic getaway in the city where Tribett and her husband got married turned into the story of a lifetime for the couple.
“It’s our anniversary today, so it’s not how I expected our anniversary to go,” the Austin resident said as she chuckled. “But, we’re grateful we’re both alive and good.”
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The crash caused major traffic on I-5 as authorities rushed to the scene to respond. The Federal Aviation Administration said two people were on board the plane when it came on the freeway.
Tribett said there was no warning of the plane’s quiet incoming, so the event was completely unexpected.
“Just out of nowhere. We just felt like someone hit us from behind and it felt like someone was going really, really fast and just slammed into us from behind. It feels like it wasn’t even real.”
Tribett described how the impact of the plane striking her rental car caused the aircraft to clip a second vehicle on the freeway.
"So, it hit the back of us and we knocked it off and then it spun around and the other car had its wing in the back of it," she said. "So it hit us, and then swung around and the wing got stuck in the other car.”
Aerial footage from NBC San Diego's SkyRanger 7 showed the plane was missing half of its right wing, with a chunk of the aircraft lodged in the back of an SUV and another part of the plane on the side of the freeway.
The occupants of that SUV included a woman and her granddaughter, the owner of the vehicle told San Diego. The granddaughter was taken to the hospital to be evaluated; it is unclear if she or her grandmother suffered injuries during the impact.
It's still unclear why the pilot landed on the freeway, though the FAA did say it planned on investigating the incident.