Saturday, January 9, 2010

Unruly Passengers Cause 2 Flights to Change Course

Is Muhammad Abu Tahir just an unruly passenger or an Islamic saboteur?  Terrorists don't have to set off bombs, kill or maime anyone in order to disrupt Western society.  This incident could be a simple method to cause societal and economic problems.  Bin Laden has stated that one of his goals is the economic destruction of the West.  The costs are trivial as are the penalties for the agent.  Jets were scrambled, planes were diverted, people were greatly inconvenienced, and most importantly, doubt and uncertainty were generated.

The second item in this article seems to be more an issue of a crank behaving badly, but demonstrates just how sensitive and reactive we have become to small incidents aboard aircraft.

The flying Imams incident is another example of Islamists disrupting normal activity with non-violent means.  Not only did they disrupt a flight, but brought lawsuits which caused a chilling effect for airlines and citizens reporting suspicious terrorist activity.


FROM NEWSMAX.COM:

Unruly Passengers Cause 2 Flights to Change Course
Friday, 08 Jan 2010 10:02 PM Article Font Size   

Disruptive passengers caused two commercial airplanes to be diverted Friday, with military jets scrambling to escort a San Francisco-bound flight into a Colorado airport, authorities said.

The incidents come amid heightened concern over airline security after a Nigerian man allegedly tried to blow up a Detroit-bound Northwest Airlines plane on Christmas Day. And in London late Friday, police arrested three passengers after removing them from a jetliner bound for Dubai. Officials described it only as a security incident.

Two F-16s were launched at 11:44 a.m. to catch up with AirTran Airways Flight 39 from Atlanta to San Francisco after a report that an intoxicated passenger had locked himself in a bathroom, the Colorado-based North American Aerospace Defense Command said.
The jets arrived over Colorado Springs Airport as the captain — who AirTran said had decided to divert the plane — landed there around noon, NORAD spokeswoman Stacey Knott said.

Colorado Springs police detained the passenger, who allegedly refused to follow flight crew instructions to take his seat before locking himself in a lavatory. Canine teams searched the airplane, and the flight was cleared to continue to San Francisco.
Muhammad Abu Tahir, 46, of Virginia, was being held at the El Paso County jail, the FBI said. Federal charges for interference with a flight crew were expected to be filed Monday. His hometown was not immediately available.

Also Friday, a Hawaii-bound flight had to change course and land in Los Angeles after a man was accused of harassing a woman. The man was removed from the jet that departed Las Vegas early Friday.

The man was interviewed and released after the woman declined to press charges, Los Angeles airport police Sgt. Jim Holcomb said. The exact nature of the disruption or whether the passengers knew each other wasn't known, Holcomb said.
The Hawaiian Airlines flight resumed to Honolulu and arrived three hours late.
It was the second time this week a flight to Hawaii had to change course because of an onboard disruption.

On Wednesday, a Maui-bound Hawaiian Airlines flight from Portland, Ore., was turned around and escorted by two F-15 military fighters because of an uncooperative passenger. The U.S. attorney's office on Friday filed a charge of interfering with a crew member against the passenger, Joseph Hedlund Johnson of Salem, Ore.
An FBI affidavit said Johnson, traveling with his girlfriend, held his carryon bag closely and was unhappy he couldn't stow it under his seat.
He was in the bulkhead row, so there was no seat ahead to provide storage beneath, the affidavit said. Attendants told him the space beneath his seat was reserved for the feet of the passenger behind.

Then the 56-year-old then filled out a comment card with phrases about death and crashing, and he gave it to an attendant who passed it along to the pilot, the affidavit said.
"The Captain stated that he absolutely felt threatened by the contents of the card, especially when he considered Johnson's earlier suspicious behavior with his bag," the affidavit said.

A search after the plane returned showed Johnson and his girlfriend had no dangerous items, the FBI said.

Johnson was not jailed. He is expected to appear in court Monday.