AT WPBF.COM AND ON OUR FREE WPBF 25 NEWS APP. A PRIVATE JET STRIKING SEVERAL DEER DURING TAKEOFF AT NORTH PALM BEACH COUNTY AIRPORT TONIGHT. WE’RE HEARING THE DISPATCH AUDIO AS THAT PILOT WAS FORCED TO MAKE AN EMERGENCY LANDING AT PBIA. THEY DID DEFINITELY STRIKE A DEER. AIRCRAFT IS DAMAGED. THEY’RE GOING TO NEED TOE TUGGED OFF THE AIRFIELD. REPORTER RACHAEL PERRY SPOKE WITH A LOCAL PILOT AND WALKS US THROUGH WHAT HAPPENED. IT WAS SUPPOSED TO BE A ROUTINE TAKEOFF. ALL OUR PERSONNEL WERE IN THE PROCESS OF WORKING TO ALERT TWO. IT WAS AROUND 8:00 TUESDAY NIGHT WHEN FLIGHT PLANS CHANGED IN A MATTER OF SECONDS AS SIX DEER GRACED THE RUNWAY HERE AT NORTH PALM BEACH COUNTY AIRPORT. THERE’S FIVE SOULS ON BOARD. AN AIRCRAFT STRUCK SOME DEER ON TAKEOFF. WE HEARD. THAT ON TAKEOFF, AND STRUCK ABOUT SIX GEAR OR 6,000 POUNDS ON FUEL. FIVE SOULS ON BOARD, LEFT EMERGENCY DISPATCH AUDIO DETAILS THE EVENTS AS A PILOT AND FIVE PASSENGERS PREPARED FOR AN EMERGENCY LANDING. THEY DID DEFINITELY STRIKE A DEER. AIRCRAFT IS DAMAGED. THEY’RE GOING TO NEED TUGGED OFF THE AIRFIELD NOW. I TALKED WITH A LOCAL PILOT WHO TELLS ME AIRPORTS DO A GOOD JOB OF ANIMAL CONTROL, BUT WHEN THEY DO GET IN, PILOTS OFTENTIMES HAVE NO OTHER OPTION OTHER THAN TO HIT THEM. CLEARLY, YOU DON’T WANT TO DO ANYTHING THAT’S GOING TO, YOU KNOW, CAUSE YOU TO CRASH. SOMETIMES IT’S BETTER TO HIT THE ANIMAL AND NOT BE IN THE AIR WHEN YOU DO IT. SAYING SAFETY IS ALWAYS THEIR CONCERN. I TELL MY STUDENTS, LOOK, WHATEVER YOU HIT, WHETHER IT’S A BIRD OR A DEER, IT MAY DAMAGE THE PLANE. I DON’T CARE, WE CAN FIX THE PLANE. I JUST DON’T WANT YOU TO GET HURT. ALSO ADDING THIS IS EXTREMELY RARE. YOU CAN FLY YOUR WHOLE LIFE. YOUR ENTIRE LIFE. I’VE GOT 16,000 FLIGHT HOURS. THAT’S TWO FULL YEARS OFF THE SURFACE OF THE EARTH, AND I’VE. I’VE NEVER HIT AN ANIMAL, YOU KNOW, WITH AN AIRPLANE. SO CAN IT HAPPEN? SURE. IT’S LIKELY TO HAPPEN. PROBABLY NOT. THE CESSNA CITATION, A PRIVATE JET DIVERTED TO PALM BEACH INTERNATIONAL WHERE EMERGENCY CREWS ARE SEEN PREPARING FOR THEIR LANDING. RESCUE ESCORT. RESPOND TO THE AIRCRAFT. LET’S DO AN INSPECTION OF THE AIRCRAFT. THE GOOD NEWS ALL PASSENGERS MADE I
Plane makes emergency landing after striking multiple deer during takeoff at Florida airport
A private jet hit multiple deer on the runway Tuesday morning, forcing an emergency landing at Palm Beach International Airport. Fortunately, all passengers on board escaped unharmed

Updated: 7:25 PM EST Feb 12, 2026
A private jet was forced to make an emergency landing after striking multiple deer during takeoff. Stay up-to-date: The latest headlines and weather from WPBF 25It happened Tuesday evening at North Palm Beach County Aviation Airport. According to the Federal Aviation Administration, the plane struck several deer while taking off from the airport. The pilot eventually landed safely at Palm Beach International Airport, where first responders were staged. The FAA is now investigating the crash. WPBF 25 News obtained the dispatch audio from the incident, where one person can be heard saying the plane had minor damage but would need to be towed off the airfield. No injuries were reported. The FAA maintains a database where it records each collision between aircraft and wildlife, more commonly referred to as wildlife strikes. Their data shows from 1990 to 2024, 656 species of birds, 57 species of terrestrial mammals, 52 species of bats, and 45 species of reptiles were identified as struck by an aircraft. According to the FAA, deer and coyotes are the terrestrial mammals with the most damaging strikes. The FAA data shows the number of damaging strikes has declined over the years. WPBF 25 News spoke with a local pilot, Michael Leighton, to better understand how rare these incidents are. “It is an extremely, extremely rare event, like getting hit by lightning or getting bit by a shark. It’s not something that happens. You could fly your whole life, your entire life. I’ve got 16,000 flight hours, that’s two full years off the surface of the Earth, and I’ve never hit an animal with an airplane. Can it happen? Sure. Is it likely to happen? Probably not,” Leighton said. Leighton said airports do a good job of keeping wildlife off the runways, but when they do get inside, he said, oftentimes it’s safer for a pilot to hit the animal. “Clearly, you don’t want to do anything that’s going to cause you to crash. Sometimes it’s better to hit the animal and not be in the air when you do it, than to try and lift the plane off early, for example, to miss it, and then create a flight hazard to yourself because the plane wasn’t ready to fly,” he said. As a flight instructor, he said he teaches his students that their safety is the priority. “I tell my students, look, whatever you hit, whether it’s a bird or deer, it may damage the plane. I don’t care. We can fix the plane. I just don’t want you to get hurt,” Leighton said. He said that after a certain speed, it’s nearly impossible for a plane to safely avoid hitting an animal. “You’re not able to swerve left or right like you can with a car. With an airplane, your range of motion is much smaller because the plane only has three wheels, so it’s not made for that. It’s not made to turn quickly at high speed on the ground,” Leighton said. However, when it’s safe, Leighton said he teaches his students to go around. “It’s a very rare event, and it’s almost impossible to train for. We routinely teach that if there’s a creature on the runway while we’re approaching, we go around. When I’m out with my students, for example, and I want them to execute a go-around, I’ll say, Oh, cow on the runway, go around. It could be a cow or another airplane or a coyote or whatever, but the point is wildlife on the runway, we go around,” he said. According to the FAA, from 1990 through 2024, they received reports of 88 aircraft destroyed or damaged beyond repair due to wildlife strikes. Their data shows terrestrial mammals, primarily white-tailed deer, were responsible for about 40 percent of the incidents.Get the latest news updates with the WPBF 25 News app. You can download it here.
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. —
A private jet was forced to make an emergency landing after striking multiple deer during takeoff.
Stay up-to-date: The latest headlines and weather from WPBF 25
It happened Tuesday evening at North Palm Beach County Aviation Airport. According to the Federal Aviation Administration, the plane struck several deer while taking off from the airport. The pilot eventually landed safely at Palm Beach International Airport, where first responders were staged. The FAA is now investigating the crash.
WPBF 25 News obtained the dispatch audio from the incident, where one person can be heard saying the plane had minor damage but would need to be towed off the airfield.
No injuries were reported.
The FAA maintains a database where it records each collision between aircraft and wildlife, more commonly referred to as wildlife strikes.
Their data shows from 1990 to 2024, 656 species of birds, 57 species of terrestrial mammals, 52 species of bats, and 45 species of reptiles were identified as struck by an aircraft. According to the FAA, deer and coyotes are the terrestrial mammals with the most damaging strikes.
The FAA data shows the number of damaging strikes has declined over the years.
WPBF 25 News spoke with a local pilot, Michael Leighton, to better understand how rare these incidents are.
“It is an extremely, extremely rare event, like getting hit by lightning or getting bit by a shark. It’s not something that happens. You could fly your whole life, your entire life. I’ve got 16,000 flight hours, that’s two full years off the surface of the Earth, and I’ve never hit an animal with an airplane. Can it happen? Sure. Is it likely to happen? Probably not,” Leighton said.
Leighton said airports do a good job of keeping wildlife off the runways, but when they do get inside, he said, oftentimes it’s safer for a pilot to hit the animal.
“Clearly, you don’t want to do anything that’s going to cause you to crash. Sometimes it’s better to hit the animal and not be in the air when you do it, than to try and lift the plane off early, for example, to miss it, and then create a flight hazard to yourself because the plane wasn’t ready to fly,” he said.
As a flight instructor, he said he teaches his students that their safety is the priority.
“I tell my students, look, whatever you hit, whether it’s a bird or deer, it may damage the plane. I don’t care. We can fix the plane. I just don’t want you to get hurt,” Leighton said.
He said that after a certain speed, it’s nearly impossible for a plane to safely avoid hitting an animal.
“You’re not able to swerve left or right like you can with a car. With an airplane, your range of motion is much smaller because the plane only has three wheels, so it’s not made for that. It’s not made to turn quickly at high speed on the ground,” Leighton said.
However, when it’s safe, Leighton said he teaches his students to go around.
“It’s a very rare event, and it’s almost impossible to train for. We routinely teach that if there’s a creature on the runway while we’re approaching, we go around. When I’m out with my students, for example, and I want them to execute a go-around, I’ll say, Oh, cow on the runway, go around. It could be a cow or another airplane or a coyote or whatever, but the point is wildlife on the runway, we go around,” he said.
According to the FAA, from 1990 through 2024, they received reports of 88 aircraft destroyed or damaged beyond repair due to wildlife strikes. Their data shows terrestrial mammals, primarily white-tailed deer, were responsible for about 40 percent of the incidents.
Get the latest news updates with the WPBF 25 News app. You can download it here.