AVIATION

20 April Orlando, Florida

A passenger had a meltdown after listening to a crying infant on board an airplane. In a viral video, the passenger is seen yelling at a flight attendant to make the baby be quiet. “We are in a fucking tin can with a baby in a goddamn echo chamber,” the man was caught on video saying. When he was told to lower his voice by airline staff, he responded saying they should “lower that baby’s voice.” The baby had been crying for half an hour when the passenger began yelling. The plane was diverted to Orlando. Police met the plane and spoke with the passenger but he was not arrested. Southwest released a statement saying they appreciated the patience of the other customers who had to “experience such unacceptable behavior.”

AVIATION

10 June 2023: DFW Airport, Fort Worth, Texas

WNBA star Brittney Griner, recently freed from detainment in Russia, was harassed by a man described as a social media “provocateur” at a Dallas airport. Griner was at the Dallas Fort Worth International Airport traveling with teammates on their way to a game. Griner was yelled at by the man who was remarking about “the Merchant of Death.” The confrontation got heated eventually leading to the man being tackled and law enforcement becoming involved. Griner subsequently called for more security for players and an announcement was eventually made that she would be traveling on private jets for the remainder of the season.

AVIATION

14 April 2023: Spy Balloon Update

Leaked documents show that U.S. intelligence agencies were aware of up to four additional Chinese spy balloons different to the one that was ultimately shot down off the coast of the U.S. in February. The capabilities of the one that flew over the continental United States during January and February, have been questioned. The balloon carried sensors and antennas according to a document allegedly leaked to a Discord chatroom by Jack Teixeira, a member of the Massachusetts Air National Guard. Other balloons flew over a U.S. carrier strike group in a previously unreported incident, and one crashed in the South China Sea, a second top-secret document stated. The balloon that flew over the continental U.S. in January and February had sophisticated reconnaissance equipment including synthetic aperture radar. Spy plane photographs of the balloon showed a parabolic dish, sensors and solar panels capable of producing “humongous,” amounts of power. It was about 100 times the amount generated by balloons such as Google’s Loon, which provides internet service, and nearly twice that generated by some orbital SAR satellites, according to a specialist in remote sensing, Paul Byrne, who is an associate professor at Washington University in St. Louis, in a Washington Post report.

AVIATION

18 April 2023: Across the U.S.

Southwest Airlines requested the FAA order a nationwide ground stop of all of the carrier’s flights on 18 April. The FAA lifted the ground stop at every airport except for Love Field in Dallas, Texas, after a few hours. The order wreaked havoc on Southwest’s scheduling, causing around 2,500 Southwest flights, 30 percent of the carrier’s schedule to be delayed, according to data from FlightAware. “Southwest has resumed operations after temporarily pausing flight activity this morning to work through data connection issues. We offer our heartfelt apologies to customers whose journey with us today might be delayed,” a statement release by the airline said.

AVIATION

20 April 2023: Orlando, Florida

A passenger upset over a baby’s extended period of crying let out an outburst of his own on a Southwest Airlines flight. The man threw a fit that forced police to meet the plane when it landed. After the baby had been crying for an extended period of time, the man demanded flight attendants do something about it and began yelling. A video posted to social media shot by a passenger on the plane, shows the flight attendant telling the adult male passenger, “Sir, you are yelling,” and saying, “It’s a baby,’ in response to the man demanding that the baby be made to be quiet. The flight was diverted to Orlando, Florida, but was originally set to go to Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. The man was met at the gate by airport police.

AVIATION

10 May 2023: Atlanta, Georgia

Kenny Wells, the person who caused chaos at the Atlanta Hartsfield Jackson Intl. Airport in November of 2021, was sentenced to 10 years in federal prison on May 10. Wells was trying to catch a flight but had brought a gun to the airport. A screener searched his bag and video showed Wells reaching into the bag. At that moment, the gun accidentally went off. Wells said he panicked and made a run for it, leaving behind his boarding pass. Wells dumped the stolen gun in a garbage can off airport property. Wells pleaded guilty to being a felon in possession of a firearm.

AVIATION

23 May 2023: Uruguay

Police in Uruguay discovered a drug ring that smuggled cocaine from South America to Europe hidden inside surfboards. Counter-narcotics police in Spain, Portugal and Italy, assisted and three Italian citizens were arrested. Officers were alerted to six surfboards by sniffer dogs in Uruguay. The boards were broken open and found to hold 50 kg (110 lb) of cocaine. One board was allowed by the police to continue to its intended destination to track down those receiving it. Officers said the boards were unusually heavy. When they passed through a scanner, the packages could be seen inside. A photo, shown here, which was released by Uruguay’s interior ministry, shows the cocaine from one of the boards after it had been cut open. Police said they believe the Italian smugglers entered Uruguay across the land border with Brazil.

AVIATION

14 May 2023: En route from Seattle to North Carolina

Francisco De Jesus said he was flying with his 13-year-old daughter from Seattle-Tacoma International Airport to Charlotte, North Carolina and while using the plane’s restroom, flight attendants gave his daughter wings, asked if she was OK, where she was going, and who she was going to meet. When the flight landed in Charlotte, De Jesus said that personnel, including the airport’s head of security, met them after they deplaned. “As we’re deplaning, we’re greeted by several individuals. One of them who introduced himself as the head of security for the Charlotte International Airport,” said De Jesus in a news report. De Jesus and his daughter were led through the terminal and law enforcement eventually explained to him that flight attendants alerted them to signs of human trafficking.

AVIATION

22 March 2023: Queensland, Australia

Five men were charged after a flight from Papua New Guinea to Sydney which was found to be carrying 52 kilograms of the drug methamphetamine. The Australian Federal Police (AFP) alleged the men, who were from New South Wales, are members of a “transnational serious organized crime syndicate.” The police had surveilled them for months. Police say March 22, two men co-piloted a twin-engine Beechcraft light aircraft from Wilton, south west of Sydney, to the rural town of Monto in Queensland’s North Burnett region, to refuel. They then flew to Bulolo in PNG, where they allegedly collected the meth. The pilots, Bernard Alexander, 51, and John Horvath, 52, flew back to central Queensland attempting to avoid detection by turning off the plane’s transponder and flying at low altitude. Three other ground personnel were also arrested.

AVIATION

26 May 2023: En route to Jeju, Korea

Twelve people were injured en route to Jeju, Korea, when a man opened the emergency door of an Asiana Airlines Airbus A321-200, while in flight, but at a low altitude. The incident caused air to flow into the cabin, terrifying passengers. Some testified they suffered severe ear pain. A social media video shared widely shows passengers’ hair being whipped by air blowing into the cabin. The plane was flying just a few hundred feet off the ground while preparing to land, according to Asiana Airlines officials, which allowed the exit to be opened since there wasn’t a large pressure difference. The airline said in a statement that it would stop the sale of emergency exit seats on its 174-seat A321-200 planes and the 195-seat A321-200s, as a safety precaution. The passenger, surnamed Lee, was seated near the emergency exit, airline officials said. He was arrested shortly thereafter.