Not To Be Out Done, US Air Passenger Freaks Out

A day after a JetBlue pilot suffered an apparent meltdown, a US Airways passenger on a flight from Charlotte to Fort Myers decided to try her hand at disrupting a flight to the point that she starting kicking and spitting at flight crew. According to the Foxnews.com story, She had apparently been under the influence of alcohol at the time of the rampage.

Is the cabin pressurization being turned off on flights lately???

Here’s the text from the Foxnews article:

A disgruntled passenger aboard a US Airways flight from North Carolina to Florida was reportedly arrested Tuesday night after witnesses say she attacked crew members before being wrestled to the floor.
The latest incident comes on the heels of a JetBlue captain who had to be subdued by passengers after he apparently acted erratically during an early-morning flight Tuesday from New York’s Kennedy Airport to Las Vegas.

Police in Florida are charging a New Jersey woman with three counts of battery and one count of interfering with an aircraft, after she allegedly attacked crew members on board a US Airways flight
According to an arrest report, the woman was apparently intoxicated on the flight from Charlotte, N.C., to Fort Myers, Fla. It says she kicked, spit on and cursed at a flight attendant after the crew member refused to serve her alcohol.
The report says she then slapped a male attendant who tried to intervene and kicked another male flight attendant as an off-duty deputy who was on board the flight wrestled her to the back of the jet.
It says she continued kicking after her hands were cuffed by plastic restraints.
Meanwhile, more information is beginning to emerge about the circumstances aboard JetBlue Flight 191, which was forced to make an emergency landing in Amarillo, Texas, during its flight to Las Vegas.
The JetBlue captain’s co-workers tried to calm him as he became more jittery, coaxing him to the back of the plane while making sure that he didn’t return to the plane’s controls.
Sources identified the captain to Fox News as Clayton Osbon, a JetBlue flight standards captain from Richmond Hill, Ga. He was taken into custody when the flight landed, but it wasn’t immediately clear whether he faces any charges.
Osbon had ranted about Al Qaeda and a possible bomb onboard before being subdued, passengers said. Laurie Dhue, a former Fox News anchor who was on board the flight, said she also heard the captain mention “Afghanistan” and “Israel” during his rant.
Then, he sprinted up the cabin’s aisle — ranting about a bomb, screaming “They’re going to take us down!” and urging confused passengers to pray.
“Nobody knew what to do because he is the captain of the plane,” said Don Davis, the owner of a Ronkonkoma, New York-based wireless broadband manufacturer who was traveling to Sin City for a security industry conference.
Gabriel Schonzeit, who was sitting in the third row, said the captain said there could be a bomb on board the flight.
“He started screaming about Al Qaeda and possibly a bomb on the plane and Iraq and Iran and about how we were all going down,” Schonzeit told the Amarillo Globe-News.
“A group of us just jumped up instinctually and grabbed him and put him to the ground,” Antolino said.
Dave Barger, JetBlue’s CEO and president, says the captain who ranted about a bomb on a flight to Las Vegas is a “consummate professional” whom he has personally known for years. He said there is nothing in the captain’s record to indicate he could be a risk.
Airline pilots must have a first-class medical certificate and it must be renewed every year if the pilot is under 40 and every six months if he’s over the age, a Federal Aviation Administration spokesman told FoxNews.com. The examination takes psychological conditions as part of the assessment and all existing physical and psychological conditions must be disclosed, the spokesman said.
JetBlue declined to answer questions from FoxNews.com about Osbon’s medical history or if he will be able to fly for the carrier again.
Josh Redick, who was sitting near the middle of the plane, said the captain seemed “irate” and was “spouting off about Afghanistan and souls and Al Qaeda.”
Airline officials said the pilot was taken to a hospital.
The FBI was coordinating an investigation with the airport police, Amarillo police, the FAA and the Transportation Safety Administration, said agency spokeswoman Lydia Maese in Dallas. She declined to comment on arrests.
The flight left New York around 7 a.m. and was in the air for 3 1/2 hours before landing in Texas. The passengers boarded another plane for Las Vegas several hours later. That plane arrived in Las Vegas about two hours later.
John Cox, an aviation safety consultant and former airline pilot, said incidents in which pilots become mentally incapacitated during a flight are “pretty rare.” He said he could only recall two or three other examples in the more than 40 years he has been following commercial aviation

Lost Luggage Now Has It’s Own Reality TV Show

As I was watching the Travel Channel last night, a commercial advertising a new show caught my eye. Starting on April 11, there will be a show that involves the auctions of lost luggage. Yes, reality TV has run out of ideas to such an extent that it has plumbed new depths in viewer entertainment. I guess billionaire rednecks, rookie gold miners and multi-millionaire “good ‘ol boys” who make duck calls are no longer good enough! (Don’t get me wrong, I catch myself watching these shows).

The new show, called “Baggage Battles” will be based on 3 teams of auction goers that travel to auctions around the US and the World that specifically deal with lost and abandoned airline luggage. The first episode will kick off at Miami’s International Airport.

Apparently there are auctions that can be attended where you can buy lost luggage at wholesale. I doubt that the Travel Channel would put together a show that doesn’t have some great surprises as far as what’s uncovered in these auctions. It’s piqued my curiosity enough to make sure my DVR is set to record the show and at least give it a chance.

Up until now, the only thing I knew about what happens to lost luggage is that some of it makes it to a store in Scottsboro, Alabama called The Unclaimed Baggage Center where lost luggage goes and it’s contents are put on sale to the public. If anyone has ever been there, I’d be curious to hear your opinion……

If you’ve ever lost a piece of luggage, you may want to tune in……..your long lost suitcase may have become a TV Star!

Lufthansa May Exit Air Freight Business

In news over the weekend, Lufthansa’s head of cargo, Karl Urich Garnadt suggested that Lufthansa may cease air freight operations if a court in Leipzig rules in favor of a ban on night freighter flight operations in Frankfurt. I had written about the legal actions being taken recently. It looks like Lufthansa is ready to stop their freighter flights since it would make no economic sense to maintain the fleet while at the same time it could not operate. Obviously this would also entail substantial job losses should Lufthansa find it necessary to do this in light of the court’s ruling. I always find the unintended consequences to be more interesting than the actual issue at hand. Here we have a legal complaint filed by residents who leave near Frankfurt’s airport and a court seemingly ready to side with them. If the court rules in favor of the people, the people themselves will be ones with the most to lose. Additional details can be found in the Reuters article below:

(Reuters) – The air freight arm of Germany’s Lufthansa may give up on its freighter fleet should a recently imposed ban on night flights at Frankfurt airport be confirmed by a court in Leipzig on April 4, the unit’s chief executive told a German magazine.

The current solution of scheduling take-offs and landings only before 2200 CET and after 0500 CET was “just a stopgap. It costs money and does not pay,” Karl Ulrich Garnadt told Focus, according to an excerpt of an article to be published on Monday.

If necessary Lufthansa Cargo may have to part ways with its freighter fleet in the long-term, consisting of 18 McDonell Douglas MD 11 planes, Focus quoted Garnadt as saying.

The magazine said around half of Lufthansa Cargo’s freight is transported via passenger planes.

Previously, Garnadt said the night flight ban at Frankfurt, imposed in October, would hurt earnings by around 40 million euros ($53 million) a year and sales by over 100 million euros if it were made permanent.

Lufthansa Cargo made an operating profit of 249 million euros in 2011, but said it would be unable to replicate this in 2012 due to overcapacity, a weak Chinese market and the night flight ban at its Frankfurt hub.

($1 = 0.7540 euros) (Reporting by Christoph Steitz; Editing by Mark Potter)