Dinner had just started. Drinks were being served. Passengers were chatting, reading, maybe dozing off.
Then it hit.
Without warning, Flight 56—a Delta Air Lines flight en route from Salt Lake City to Amsterdam—was suddenly tossed into chaos. Severe turbulence struck hard and fast, sending passengers, flight attendants, and even meal carts hurtling through the cabin.
By the time the Airbus A330-900 made an emergency landing in Minneapolis-St. Paul just before 8 p.m. Wednesday, 25 people were on their way to the hospital.
According to Delta, there were 275 passengers and 13 crew members on board when the turbulence hit. The airline described it as “significant.” Emergency responders were already waiting at the gate. Paramedics from the Minneapolis-St. Paul Fire Department rushed in to assess injuries and transport those in need of further care.
But the most unsettling part? Passengers say there was no warning. No indication of what was coming next.
Leeann Nash, who was traveling with her husband, described the moment the cabin turned into a scene of chaos. “It was a very abrupt, hard hit,” she told local reporters. “If you didn’t have your seatbelt on — everyone that didn’t — they hit the ceiling.”
She didn’t just mean that figuratively.
Food trays launched. Beverage carts smashed into the ceiling. People were thrown upward and then slammed back to the floor. Nash said it happened more than once. Some passengers were visibly injured. Some shaken to the core.
“There were glass bottles flying around,” she said. “Those carts are very heavy.”
Delta Flight DL56 (A330‑900) from Salt Lake City to Amsterdam hit intense turbulence midair, forcing an emergency landing in Minneapolis
—275 passengers, 13 crew
—25 hospitalized
—Food carts & passengers violently thrown
One of 2025’s worst turbulence cases#Alerta #earthquake pic.twitter.com/Gy9Gl6HATh— GlobeUpdate (@Globupdate) July 31, 2025
The timing only made it worse. Flight attendants had just begun meal service. Most passengers were out of their seats, reaching for drinks or stretching. The cabin was active — and completely unprepared for what came next.
Despite the sudden chaos, Nash said the crew remained calm and professional. “They were incredibly calm, very well trained, and very responsive,” she noted. That calm helped settle the mood inside a cabin filled with shock and fear.
Photos from the aftermath show debris scattered throughout the aisle. Some seats are reportedly damaged. Other passengers describe cuts, bruises, and injuries from flying objects. Cellphones, food trays, and even shoes were thrown across the cabin.
The Federal Aviation Administration has opened an investigation into what caused the sudden turbulence. The National Weather Service had not issued any special warnings for the area where the incident occurred. That’s raising questions—and concern—about just how sudden and unpredictable this kind of turbulence can be.
As the investigation begins, those on board are left with more than just physical wounds. Passengers say they’re still processing what happened.
TERRIFYING: Delta Flight DL56 from Salt Lake City to Amsterdam slammed by SEVERE turbulence, diving 1,350 ft in seconds! 25 passengers hospitalized after emergency landing in Minneapolis.
#DeltaTurbulence #AirSafety #BreakingNews pic.twitter.com/pJdIwkkOGb
— NewsDaily
(@XNews24_7) July 31, 2025
It was supposed to be a routine international flight. Instead, it became a terrifying ride with a detour to the ER.
The flight never made it to Amsterdam.
But what happened mid-air is making waves far beyond Minnesota.














Delta Flight DL56 (A330‑900) from Salt Lake City to Amsterdam hit intense turbulence midair, forcing an emergency landing in Minneapolis

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