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January 16, 2006 – El Paso, TX, USA. A mechanic standing near a Boeing 737 at El Paso International Airport in Texas was sucked into one of the engines and killed, officials said.

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Continental Airlines Flight 1515 was preparing to take off for Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston when “a maintenance-related engine run-up of the right-hand engine” was carried out, said Roland Herwig, a spokesman for the Federal Aviation Administration’s southwest region in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. “Someone on the ground was sucked into the engine,” he said.

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In a written statement, Continental Chairman and CEO Larry Kellner said the person killed was a mechanic who worked for one of the airline’s suppliers. The 737-500 was carrying 114 passengers and five crew members at the time of the accident.

He said the incident occurred during a maintenance check in preparation for the plane’s departure. A spokeswoman for Boeing said Monday’s incident is not the first such accident. “It doesn’t happen very often,” spokeswoman Liz Verdier said. “It has happened in the past.” Either way, she said, the responsibility lies with Continental: “The airlines are responsible for their safety procedures.” The National Transportation Safety Board has sent a team of investigators from its office in Denver, Colorado, Herwig said.

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