Delta passenger opens door, deploys emergency exit slide on plane at Los Angeles airport | CNN

A Delta Air Lines passenger was arrested after opening one of the plane’s doors and sliding down an emergency exit slide as the plane prepared for takeoff from Los Angeles to Seattle Saturday, officials said.

           

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Dani Sue Stringer There's been a study of people who disrupt planes that concluded there is no way to discern who would disrupt a plane? I have a hard time believing that. If your point is let's not throw the baby (everyone neurodivergent) out with the bathwater (people who are at risk for disrupting air travel) then i'm with you, but that is very different from concluding there is NO WAY to discern who might put others safety at risk. That we are, at this point, doing EVERYTHING we can do to keep the flying public safe. I really doubt that. Primarily because I haven't seen anything that says we are doing everything. If someone has determined that, I'd love to see it.


Eddie Khay-Tsiba Mkhosi Jr.Well since you never know when.a panic attack will happen it won't show on a background check. I have had panic attacks. They just come on you. If you get a warning and try to stop it often it really gets bad
Lucky I have never had one on a plane. Infact I don't mind flying but getting ready for a trip or even leading up to a surgical procedure I have had them. It is not fun and it is both scary to people around you and you cause once it start you can't stop it. It is also embarrassing.


Jason Crew I just don't see how there is way to discern this fairly. I read study that all serial killers have a history of torturing animals...usually as kids....but not all people who torture animals go on to kill people. They definitely should be examining every person who has disrupted a flight in this way or similar. Their medical and mental health history might shed some light. Their personal lives, the stresses happening at the time. And let's be honest...flying is not an easy, carefree activity. They are cramming more people on planes, taking away services, overbooking and disrupting passengers' lives every day. This has to be a compounding factor on someone already in a high stress situation. It doesn't seem outside the realm of possibility that it becomes the breaking point for someone with fragile mental health.


Larry Wilson You looked at the difference in the flight experience since the 60s, 70s, 80s? Flights were luxury back then, even tbe economy seating. Wider more comfortable seats, full meals, real snacks, also people smoked which took the edge off for a lot of them. I'll also say, this did happen in the 90s because I was on a plane when a lady freaked out and bailed while we waited on the tarmac. Granted this was one of those smaller planes that didn't have any sort of inflatable egress deal and it was the flight from hell: no air con while we waited on sweltering tarmac for hours, people were crying, occasionally screaming, a few people vomited, I was a kid and it made quite the long term impression on me.




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