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Get you up to speed: Student pilot forced to land plane alone after instructor ‘jumps to his death mid-flight’ | News World
Leandro Bertazzo, a 42-year-old flight instructor, reportedly jumped from the cabin of a Cessna C-150 during a training flight near Toledo, Argentina, on July 4. The 22-year-old student pilot, who was left to land the aircraft alone, safely brought it down at Coronel Olmedo Airport and radioed for help following the incident.
The Federal Justice of Córdoba is conducting an investigation into the incident, focusing on all relevant circumstances and witness accounts suggesting a deliberate act. Authorities are also examining the aircraft and flight documentation, particularly any potential mechanical failures related to the hatch or aircraft safety systems.
The Federal Justice of Córdoba is investigating the circumstances surrounding Leandro Bertazzo’s death, with officials scrutinising potential mechanical failures related to the aircraft’s safety systems. Witness accounts suggest a deliberate act, leaving the local aviation community in shock and prompting discussions on mental health support within the industry.
What remains unclear — Investigators have yet to determine whether a mechanical failure contributed to the incident involving Leandro Bertazzo.
Student pilot lands Cessna solo after instructor falls to his death mid-flight

Leandro Bertazzo is reported to have fallen to his death from the plane as he was training a student (Picture: JamPress)
A student pilot has spoken of how she was forced to land a plane alone after her instructor ‘jumped to his death from the cockpit’ midway through the flight.
The unnamed 22-year-old had been training with her instructor, 42-year-old Leandro Bertazzo, over Toledo, Argentina, on July 4, when he reportedly opened the window of the Cessna C150 plane and jumped.
The student’s account of the incident states that she watched Bertazzo plunge to his death. While she previously thought he had deployed a parachute she soon realised that was not the case.
Despite witnessing such a harrowing moment — and having only limited experience in flying — the student raised the alarm before landing the plane safely and unaided at Coronel Olmedo Airport, which is based in Cordoba and commonly used by flight schools for training pilots.
Reports said Mr Bertazzo’s body was found in a nearby field 20 minutes later.

The unnamed student had to land the Cessna C-150 alone (Picture: JamPress)
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Eduardo Alvarez, director of flight school Flying Parrot Cordoba, where Mr Bertazzo worked as an instructor, revealed details of his conversation with the student after the incident.
Speaking to Argentinian media he explained that she told him he had ‘jumped’, adding: ‘[She said] he took his headphones off, arranged his belongings including his mobile phone, took his seatbelt off, opened the door which is very difficult to open and jumped out.’
‘She sent a message informing about the situation and proceeded to return to the runway to land,’ he added, saying the student, who had a pilot’s licence but few flying hours under her belt, had been ‘very clear, decisive, mature and professional’.

Mr Bertazzo had worked as a commercial pilot in Chile (Picture: JamPress)
‘She was very shaken, but with complete professionalism she flew the plane to the airfield and made a perfect landing,’ he added.
It’s also been reported that at one point during the flight Mr Bertazzo told her: ‘You know what to do, keep moving forward.’
Mr Alvarez went on to describe him as someone who was ‘always smiling’, saying that his death had come completely out of the blue.

His body was found in a nearby field 20 minutes after the plane landed (Picture: JamPress)
‘He took this tragic decision on board a plane with a person by his side,’ he said.
‘There’s no way to think about it or understand it, but the human mind is so complex, so treacherous. That’s why what happened, happened.’
An investigation into the instructor’s death is ongoing with officials saying the circumstances surrounding the accident are so unusual they are unable to explain how it might have happened.

Investigators are looking into the circumstances surrounding the death (Picture: JamPress)
One line of inquiry being followed is whether a mechanical failure relating to a hatch or one of the plane’s safety systems occurred, with the craft and the flight school documentation being studied, along with the communications maintained while the plane was airborne.
Local reports have said Mr Bertazzo, who described himself as a former commercial pilot in Chile, had undergone neuropsychiatric treatment.
However, only close family members were said to be aware of this before his tragic death occurred.
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Barcelona records highest temperature in 112 years at 40.5C
Barcelona reached a maximum temperature of 40.5C on Wednesday, marking its highest figure in 112 years of records.
Barcelona’s 40.5C marks unprecedented heat, profoundly impacting public health, infrastructure resilience, and local economies reliant on tourism amidst rising climate-related extreme weather events.
“Barcelona has recorded the hottest day,” confirmed AEMET spokesman José Ángel Núñez, as the city endures an unprecedented heatwave.
Barcelona sets new heat record of 40.5C, weather agencies say

Barcelona registered a maximum temperature of 40.5C on Wednesday, its highest figure in 112 years of records, weather agencies said as another heatwave struck Spain.
The provisional reading at the Fabra Observatory on Barcelona’s western outskirts broke the previous record of 40C set on July 30, 2024, regional weather monitor Meteocat said on X.
At Barcelona’s El Prat airport, which is almost at sea level and sits next to the Mediterranean, the thermometer hit 37.7C, the highest reading in records going back to 1924, national weather agency AEMET said.
“Barcelona has recorded the hottest day,” confirmed AEMET spokesman José Ángel Núñez, saying the two stations were the city’s observatories of reference.
The proximity of the Mediterranean usually moderates heat in Spain’s second city, a global tourist magnet.
A heatwave that began in Spain on Sunday is due to continue until Thursday, with some weather stations recording temperatures above 44C this week.
AEMET issued its highest red warning for heat in pockets of the Catalonia and Valencia regions on Wednesday.
The second-highest orange alert was in place for swathes of the centre, south and northeast, including Barcelona.
An exceptional heatwave that gripped much of Europe in late June saw mainland Spain swelter through its highest daily average temperatures for the month since at least 1950, at 28.17C.
According to estimates from the MoMo monitoring system, more than 1,000 deaths could be linked to heat last month.
Scientists say human-driven climate change is increasing the intensity, length and frequency of extreme weather events such as heatwaves.
Additional sources • AFP
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