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oriental flyer
30th Jan 2012, 12:34
HONG KONG - A Cathay Pacific steward was attacked by an elderly passenger who tried to barge into the plane's cockpit during the flight.

The cabin crew, a Taiwanese, was hit repeatedly by the 83-year-old man with a walking cane until it broke.


The unruly passenger had to be restrained with the help of other crew members. The injured steward suffered head trauma and vomiting, and had to be stretchered off the plane when it landed in Australia.

According to Hong Kong news reports, the incident took place on Jan 26 on flight CX 105, which left Hong Kong at 11.43pm for Adelaide. The plane was carrying 258 passengers.

Reports said the elderly passenger was seen behaving strangely after the in-flight meal. He took hold of his luggage and requested to disembark during the flight. Later, he attempted to barge into the cockpit.

He was placed under arrest after the plane landed in Adelaide.

Eyewitnesses interviewed by an Australian news channel said they did not see the fracas taking place, but they were alarmed by the cabin crew dashing down the aisle to the front of the plane.

One passenger said he heard a stewardess shouting ###### over the intercom, which is believed to be the airline's codeword for alerting the captain to an emergency situation of someone trying to enter the cockpit.

TWT
30th Jan 2012, 12:50
Thread already running :
http://www.pprune.org/fragrant-harbour/475467-pax-flt-attendant-hospital-adl.html

stilton
30th Jan 2012, 23:27
Good thing he didn't try it in 'the land of the free'





S A L T L A K E C I T Y, Sept 16

A passenger who tried to break into the cockpit during a Southwest Airlines flight was killed by other passengers who restrained him and not by a heart attack, an autopsy has concluded.

The U.S. Attorney’s office, however, will not file criminal charges, saying Jonathan Burton’s Aug. 11 death was merely an act of self-defense by frightened passengers.

Burton, 19, of Las Vegas, became combative 20 minutes before Flight 1763 was due to land, hitting other passengers and pounding on the locked cockpit door.

As many as eight of the plane’s 120 passengers subdued him.

Burton died after being removed from the plane. Authorities believed he had died of a heart attack.

Traces of Marijuana

The autopsy report classified his death a homicide because it resulted from “intentional actions by another individual or individuals.”

The report, released by Burton’s family, said he suffocated. He also had contusions and abrasions on his torso, face and neck, and suffered other blunt force injuries.

“He was strangled, beaten and kicked,” said family attorney Kent Spence. “We’d like to know how this could have happened to this young man. This kid had no history of violence, he would sooner take a spider outside than kill it.”

The autopsy found low levels of marijuana in Burton’s tissues, but said that was an “unlikely explanation” for his violent outburst.

Air Rage Takes Off

The family has not decided whether to pursue a lawsuit against Southwest Airlines or the passengers, Spence said.

The outburst occurred as federal officials report a dramatic increase in air-rage incidents nationwide. Statistics from the Federal Aviation Administration showed 292 incidents of “unruly passengers” last year, up from 138 in 1995.

The FAA can recommend fines of up to $25,000 for airline passengers who “assault, threaten, intimidate or interfere with a crew member.”
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