Body Of Frozen Stowaway On Airplane Falls 3,500 Feet And Almost Lands On Sunbather

John Baldock got lucky. Very lucky.

Baldock, who has a master's degree in engineering from Oxford University, was just chilling in the garden of a $3 million home outside London when he heard a thud.

"There was an almighty bang. At first I thought it was some scaffolding falling down and thought nothing more about it," one of Baldock's neighbors told the Daily Mail.

But it wasn't. It was the sound of a frozen body hitting the ground after falling from 3,500 feet.

"The corpse fell to the ground as the nine-hour flight from Nairobi approached London Heathrow Airport and opened its landing gear on Sunday afternoon," the Mail wrote.

Police later said the victim was likely a stowaway who had hidden inside the landing gear of a Kenya Airways flight that landed at Heathrow, about 10 miles from the house where his body was found. Upon inspection, food and drinking water was found within the wheel well.

The body created a huge crater in the lawn and smashed two concrete paving slabs.

Baldock was "very shaken" by the incident, the Mail said, noting that there was "blood all over the walls of the garden." A neighbor gave a first-hand account.

My husband decided to see what was going on and went upstairs to take a look. He was obviously quite shocked and went out into the street where my neighbour was standing on the phone to the police.

He was really shaken up. He'd been in the garden when it happened and the body must have landed so close to where he was.

My husband came back in and I asked him what was going on and he said "haven't you seen the man? The man who fell from the sky?"

I wondered what he was talking about and went up to see for myself and there in the middle of the lawn was a body of a man.



The Kenya Airports Authority said it was investigating the incident.

"We have been informed by authorities in London that on June 30th at approximately 1541hrs (UK Time) a body of a yet to be identified male stowaway was discovered in South London. The body was traced to the undercarriage of KQ flight 100 that departed from JKIA," the authority wrote on Twitter.

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Comments (4)

I love it when newspapers include the value of someones house and their job in their stories when it has zero fekin relevance whatsoever!
Some airlines would have tried to charge Baldocks freight and delivery charges. grin
I doubt the story...if you are dead and frozen... it would be a bloodless situation...just saying...confused
There is room. Not many fall out when the gear goes down--they're usually found by ground crew still in there. On shorter flights that do not go up above 20,000 some have even made it, I think.
While it's 40 degrees F colder at 20,000 than ground level, it's doable though not a brilliant idea. WWI pilots flew half-hour missions at 20,000 without oxygen masks.
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Willy3411

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