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Two people were treated and released from the University of Colorado Hospital and two others were being evaluated, spokeswoman Erika Matich said. Tim Smith of Boulder was on United Flight 937, which also flew into Denver from Washington on Tuesday and landed after the diverted plane. He said his flight was delayed because of thunderstorms but didn't have any problems. Smith saw ambulances and police cars surrounding a gate on the tarmac and one person on a stretcher when his plane taxied to the gate. "Thank God I wasn't on that flight," Smith said. Inspectors found "no obvious damage" to the diverted plane's exterior, Gregor said. They also found nothing wrong during a preliminary look at the plane's interior. But Fergus said the incident would be a "front-burner item" for both the FAA and the National Transportation Safety Board. In February, about 20 people were hurt when a United flight with 263 people onboard experienced turbulence halfway through a 13-hour trip from Washington, D.C., to Tokyo. In May, 10 people suffered injuries, including broken bones, on a United flight that hit severe turbulence over the Atlantic Ocean on its way from London to Los Angeles. The Boeing 777 was diverted to Montreal.
[Associated
Press;
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