Inside the One Chicago 2026 Crossover: The Shocking Plane Disaster and Character Death Explained
Inside the One Chicago 2026 Crossover: The Shocking Plane Disaster and Character Death Explained
Paulette CohnThu, March 5, 2026 at 4:00 AM UTC
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(Photo by: Peter Gordon/NBC)
The #OneChicago crossover episode for 2026 began with Firehouse 51 called to an airfield when a passenger jet suddenly went silent mid-air, triggering a high-stakes emergency. The plane landed itself ā Google it, itās possible -- and everybody on board was dead from a mysterious chemical that also later affected several of the first firefighters who went onboard, killing one.
Despite the FBIās belief that it was a terrorist event, Haley Upton (Tracy Spiridakos) disagreed with her superiors ā yes, sheās an FBI agent now based out of Detroit as part of a Drug Enforcement Task Force ā believing it was connected to a man on the plane [Omar] who was a known smuggler. Of course, she was right and that led her to a reunion with Jay Halstead (Jesse Lee Soffer), who was also tracking down the drug case.
In the end, it turned out Omar was smuggling in the drug for a man who had been burned badly in a fire years earlier that cost him his parents and baby sister and was out for revenge against the first responders who he felt mishandled things. Two of those were Hank Voight (Jason Beghe) and Dom Pascal (Dermot Mulroney).
In this exclusive interview with the showrunners ā Andrea Newman for Chicago Fire, Allen MacDonald for Chicago Med, and Gwen Sigan for Chicago P.D.ā Parade got the breakdown on several key points from the nightās thrilling crossover episodes.
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Allen, talk a little bit about Hannahās (Jessy Schram) decision to go out to the ambulance and deliver the baby, which put her health in jeopardy, especially because she didnāt know what the chemical was. Her actions caused Dean Archer (Steven Weber), her baby daddy, and her to have all this friction because he felt she wasnāt keeping their unborn baby safe.Allen MacDonald: Well, I think Hannah really bristles when somebody tells her that sheās being irresponsible or reckless and canāt make decisions for herself. I think [she finds] that infuriating. And I think that Archer -- for better or worse -- is a little more old school in that way, and that comes out at times. I think thatās when they have their not-so-great moments together.So, how do I feel about Hannah going to that ambulance? I think that she did the right thing because she took all the proper safety precautions that she needed to go out there. She didnāt want to stand on the sidelines when people were dying -- when a baby could be dying inside the mother that had just died.
Andrea, you killed off Macy (Carlita Tucker). What went into that decision? I see that as something affecting Stella Kidd (Miranda Rae Mayo) going forward.Andrea Newman: It definitely affects Stella. We had done a story earlier about Macy being the first Girls on Fire candidate to go to the Academy and come out as a firefighter. So, she represents a lot for Stella, for Stellaās decisions in terms of Girls on Fire, in terms of supporting these young women going into the fire department.
Macyās symbolic in a lot of ways. Thatās why I felt she was the right one to [die] to have Stella have to struggle with the aftermath of [her death]. She definitely does, but she does it in the way that Kidd always does things, which is sheās become a real leader and a lieutenant, so she knows that itās not just her that she has to get through these moments; itās all of her people underneath. So, yeah, sheāll struggle going forward with it, but sheāll also help other people who are struggling with it, too.
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Allen, what did that feel like for your doctors who think they should be able to save lives and they didnāt know what this chemical was, so they couldnāt make the right choices, which led to Macyās death.Allen: Thatās what makes it so suspenseful is that idea that our first responders on the line here are trying to desperately figure out whatās going on so they donāt make any mistakes and unnecessarily lose lives. It might not be an accident that we want it to be scary in that way.
Gwen, one of my favorite moments is at the end when Halstead and Upton apologize to each other. Talk about the emotions behind that and was that now closure for the characters on the show/ or might they pop up again at some point in the future? Maybe not together, maybe separately.Gwen Sigan: I think the door is always open. We loved having them and always would. I think it was a door sort of opening for them, right? It wasnāt full closure, but this was certainly the first time in person that they had spoken about anything that had happened between them. I think the fact that in that scene, Halstead apologizes for all of it, and heās so open, and heās so taking responsibility for it and accepting that what he did, he did all of it in the wrong way and that she can apologize as well.
I think a lot of the root of their problems was something that they both caused. So, I think itās showing that the two of them are in a better place, that they can speak like that because a couple of years ago, I donāt think they could have, and that thereās hope for them. Where they go after that scene and what they do and how long they stay in touch, I think all of that is a possibility and we wanted to end it with some possibility for the pair of them.
Related: Chicago P.D. Alums Jesse Lee Soffer and Tracy Spiridakos Return for #OneChicago Crossover
When you mentioned in the beginning that this was taking place in the past, we didnāt know that Voight (Jason Beghe) and Pascal (Dermot Mulroney) had ever met before. I donāt think they have a relationship, but they were both at the scene of this one thing, this one fire. So, does Voight now feel responsible for it? At the time he thought he was doing the right thing, saving the little boy.Gwen: Thatās whatās interesting about it. Something we love doing on our show is that you can think youāre doing things for the right reasons, you can think youāre doing everything right, but you donāt always get the right result.I think for Voight in that moment years and years ago, he thought this is the right thing and timeās going to be on my side and itās going to work out and Iāll be fine. And it didnāt. It didnāt work out.I do think he takes ownership of that in this crossover and ownership of the fact that I did make that choice and whether it was intended or not, those consequences are mine, which is a nice place for him to get to. Itās something he doesnāt always get to, but itās nice to see it.
Andrea, Pascal was arrested. Will that play out that heās been arrested, or will the FBI realize, āOh, no, we were out of lineā?Andrea: Well, heās walking out of jail at the end of the episode, but there are a lot of ramifications coming out of this, and itās not going to be easy for him. I think for Pascal, this is part of this journey that weāve talked about, which is he started as an outsider. He started as somebody who was coming in to replace Boden (Eamonn Walker), the beloved Chief Boden, and he was happy to be an outsider and happy to keep a distance, but then things changed and he got closer and closer, especially when his wife died last season and the firehouse came together for him. I think all of a sudden, he realized how connected he was to these people in a way that he didnāt expect. The crossover pays that off in the ultimate way, which he makes the biggest sacrifice for both 51 and the firehouse and for PD as well, for his cohort in the past, Voight.So yeah, heās going to have to face the consequences of this going forward. It is not going to be easy for him.
I had to Google ācan an airplane land itself?ā Who came up with that idea? Then, also, who came up with this chemical that was so hard to figure out?Andrea: Those are amazing writers. Allen, you can speak to that.Allen: Something weāve talked about several times today is just the airplane of it was something that had been discussed for many a crossover before this one. And it always felt like too much or a step too far, and then we finally found a way to make it work this year.All those things that youāre asking about were put together by the three writers that were designated by Andrea, Gwen and me to be on the crossover. Because what we have to do, we have to choose one and then they function as their own writerās room, they break the stories together. They interface with us. They interface with Wolf Entertainment on many Zooms, all of us all together.Andrea: I remember seeing Victor [Teran] digging into the chemical research, getting into picking out these names and we were trying to say them. All three of them were doing this incredible research to get to the bottom of it from the investigative standpoint, to the medical, to the effects that it has immediately on the fire scene.
Gwen, any word on when we might see Patrick John Flueger, who plays Adam Ruzek, come back?Gwen: He will be back soon. Yeah, heāll be back soon.
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This story was originally published by Parade on Mar 5, 2026, where it first appeared in the TV section. Add Parade as a Preferred Source by clicking here.
Source: āAOL Entertainmentā