JetBlue Pilot Suffers Eye Injury from Laser Pointer

The plane, en route from Syracuse to JFK Airport, landed safely around 10 minutes later

An investigation is now underway to figure out who may have been responsible. The incident happened as the plane approached JFK airport. Pei-Sze Cheng reports.

A JetBlue pilot suffered a minor eye injury Sunday when a laser pointer shone into the plane, the airline confirmed.

Officials said a green laser shone through the windshield of JetBlue Flight 657. In air traffic control transmissions, someone in the cockpit is heard saying, "We were just beamed -- approximately beamed -- by Deer Park, New York."

The plane, en route from Syracuse to JFK Airport, landed safely around 10 minutes later.

The co-pilot who had command of the plane at the time was sent to the hospital for a minor eye injury.

Aviation expert J.P. Tristani said what may seem like a minor prank a few hundred feet below could have devastating consequences. 

"That momentary distraction, because you're so focused inside the cockpit, can cause you to miss a radio call, can cause you to miss a warning light, can cause you to have a temporary blindness," said Tristani. 

The FAA and the FBI is investigating the incident, a law-enforcement source said. It's been a federal crime since 2011 to point a laser at an aircraft. 

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