Yikes: Southwest 737 & Helicopter On Collision Course, ATC Just Watches

You’d think we would’ve learned our lesson about a lack of separation between commercial aircraft and helicopters near airports from the fatal crash earlier this year, but here’s another incident that leaves us shaking our heads…
Southwest 737 & medical helicopter have very close call
VASAviation has the story of an incident that happened on Wednesday, October 29, 2025, at Cleveland Hopkins International Airport (CLE). The incident involves a Southwest Boeing 737-700 that was approaching the airport as flight WN1333 from Baltimore (BWI), as well as a Metro Life Flight Eurocopter EC-145 (a medical emergency helicopter).
The Southwest jet was given clearance to land on runway 6L, while the helicopter was crossing the airspace from south to north. Long story short, the helicopter crossed directly in the path of the Southwest 737, to the point that the Southwest plane got a Traffic Collision Avoidance System (TCAS) alert, due to lack of separation. As a result, the Southwest pilots performed a go around.
The jet and the helicopter were at the same altitude, with less than half a mile separation. Honestly, I’d recommend just watching the below video, as VASAviation does such a good job with visualizations of these incidents. I think anyone watching the below video could see from well before the incident how this was going to unfold.
It’s sort of surreal to listen to this interaction
As everyone is aware, in January 2025 we saw an American Eagle jet and a military helicopter crash into one another near Washington National Airport (DCA). In retrospect, everyone said “how could something like this happen?” Well, there are quite some similarities between that incident and this one, in terms of the helicopter being told to maintain visual separation from the jet, only for that to not be sufficient.
What’s so strange about this incident is how there sort of seems to be a diffusion of responsibility. It’s not that the air traffic controller was distracted and didn’t see what was happening — quite to the contrary, he was acutely aware.
It’s normal for helicopters to transition busy airspace, and given that this was a medical helicopter, it also had high priority for taking a direct route. But still, this is absolutely wild on a variety of levels:
- The helicopter pilot claimed to have the Southwest plane in sight, but the controller kept reminding him of the location, so clearly this was all too close for comfort for him, though he remained silent
- The helicopter pilot claimed he was going to maintain visual separation from the Southwest 737, but obviously got way too close; the issue is, there’s no actual published guidance as to what visual separation means, in terms of acceptable distance in such a scenario
- The air traffic controller asked if the helicopter pilot could pass behind the Southwest 737, but he responded “it’d be better if we can go above it and in front of it if we can”
My takeaway here is basically that the helicopter pilot was saying “we have the traffic in sight, but we’re not actually going to do anything to avoid it.” Furthermore, the helicopter pilot was essentially saying “yeah, we’d like to pass in front of the Southwest 737, at the same exact altitude where planes usually fly at that point.” That should’ve raised some red flags, particularly for the controller, who knows exactly what altitude planes are going to be at on descent.
This is just a massive breakdown in communication across the board. Ironically the Southwest pilots were the only ones who didn’t have the traffic in sight, and they were the ones who called the go around due to the TCAS alert. Meanwhile the air traffic controller and helicopter pilot knew exactly how close they were, but… seemingly did nothing with that information?
I can’t help but think back to Nathan Fielder’s incredible show, The Rehearsal, and think that’s very relevant here. It’s inexplicable how the air traffic controller knew exactly what was going on, but chose to not take action.
Bottom line
A Southwest Airlines Boeing 737 approaching Cleveland Airport had a very close call with a helicopter. Bizarrely, both the air traffic controller and helicopter knew exactly what was going on, yet chose to do nothing about it. The Southwest pilots got a TCAS alert and performed a go around, but the jet and helicopter were dangerously close.
This communication breakdown is confusing under any circumstances, but is particularly unsettling in light of January’s fatal crash.
What do you make of this strange incident at Cleveland Airport?



