§A · Dispatch · Landing
Stryker lands in Toronto the week of its cybersecurity recovery
Stryker Corporation's Global 5000 flies to Toronto as the medical-device maker works through the aftermath of a March cyberattack.
By celebplanes · 1 min read · Stryker

Stryker
Stryker Corporation flew from Kalamazoo to Toronto on June 21, 2026, aboard its Bombardier Global 5000 (N625SC), a 52-minute hop that touched down at Pearson International Airport just before noon. The flight arrives the same week the company is still absorbing the financial and operational fallout from a March 11 cybersecurity incident that disrupted its Microsoft environment, as detailed in a Stryker customer update [stryker.com](https://www.stryker.com/ca/en/about/news/a-message-to-our-customers-03-2026.html).
Stryker reported first-quarter 2026 net sales of $6.0 billion, up 2.6% year-over-year, but the cyberattack — which the company says was contained to its own internal systems and involved no ransomware or malware — obscured revenue recognition timing for its orthopedic implant business, per a June 18 report from Orthopedics This Week [orthotw.com](https://orthotw.com/2026/06/stryker-posts-6-0-billion-for-q1-up-2-6). CEO Kevin Lobo told ORTHOWORLD the company expects the hack's impact to normalize over the course of the year [orthoworld.com](https://www.orthoworld.com/stryker-expects-hack-impact-to-normalize-over-course-of-year/).
This flight to Toronto — a recurring destination in Stryker's pattern — follows a June 13 trip from a point near Nashville back to Kalamazoo, and a June 6 shuttle within the Great Lakes region. The company's three-aircraft fleet, including this Global 5000, typically serves the Kalamazoo headquarters and its North American manufacturing and distribution network.
Aboard the Bombardier Global 5000


The aircraft
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