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Tag: pilot

  • Delta flight makes emergency landing after pilot says passenger tried to access cockpit

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    A Delta Air Lines flight from Houston to Atlanta made an emergency landing early Wednesday after a passenger tried to access the cockpit, the pilot told air traffic controllers.Delta flight 2557, a Boeing 717 aircraft, had just taken off from Houston’s Hobby Airport when the pilot declared an emergency. Eight-five passengers and five crew members were on board, according to Delta.“We had a passenger get up and try to access the cockpit,” the pilot can be heard in a radio recording with air traffic control captured by Broadcastify. “Can you coordinate and have security standing by?”After confirming the cockpit was secure, he requested police and paramedics meet the plane when it landed.“(He is) in cuffs in the back of the aircraft, but he did assault another passenger, so we would like that other passenger checked out,” the pilot told air traffic control.In 2025, there were 1,621 unruly passengers reported to the Federal Aviation Administration. So far, in 2026, there have been 126.Wednesday, the plane signaled an emergency using its transponder and landed back at Hobby Airport about 17 minutes after taking off. Emergency vehicles accompanied the plane to the gate.“They are coming to the gate. The police are there waiting,” an air traffic controller told emergency responders. “Follow the aircraft to the ramp.”Delta later told CNN that the passenger “approached crew and customers but did not make contact with or attempt to access the flight deck.”“The safety of our customers and crew is paramount, and Delta has zero tolerance for unruly behavior,” the airline said in a statement. “We apologize to our customers for this experience and delay in their travels.”The flight later took off again and arrived in Atlanta about 90 minutes behind schedule.The FAA is investigating the incident.

    A Delta Air Lines flight from Houston to Atlanta made an emergency landing early Wednesday after a passenger tried to access the cockpit, the pilot told air traffic controllers.

    Delta flight 2557, a Boeing 717 aircraft, had just taken off from Houston’s Hobby Airport when the pilot declared an emergency. Eight-five passengers and five crew members were on board, according to Delta.

    “We had a passenger get up and try to access the cockpit,” the pilot can be heard in a radio recording with air traffic control captured by Broadcastify. “Can you coordinate and have security standing by?”

    After confirming the cockpit was secure, he requested police and paramedics meet the plane when it landed.

    “(He is) in cuffs in the back of the aircraft, but he did assault another passenger, so we would like that other passenger checked out,” the pilot told air traffic control.

    In 2025, there were 1,621 unruly passengers reported to the Federal Aviation Administration. So far, in 2026, there have been 126.

    Wednesday, the plane signaled an emergency using its transponder and landed back at Hobby Airport about 17 minutes after taking off. Emergency vehicles accompanied the plane to the gate.

    “They are coming to the gate. The police are there waiting,” an air traffic controller told emergency responders. “Follow the aircraft to the ramp.”

    Delta later told CNN that the passenger “approached crew and customers but did not make contact with or attempt to access the flight deck.”

    “The safety of our customers and crew is paramount, and Delta has zero tolerance for unruly behavior,” the airline said in a statement. “We apologize to our customers for this experience and delay in their travels.”

    The flight later took off again and arrived in Atlanta about 90 minutes behind schedule.

    The FAA is investigating the incident.

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  • Oakdale native to pilot in historic Super Bowl LX flyover

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    RIGHT AFTER THE NATIONAL ANTHEM ON SUNDAY, THE AIR FORCE AND NAVY TOGETHER WILL FLY OVER LEVI STADIUM FOR THE BIG GAME. IT’S THE FIRST TIME THEY’VE EVER DONE THIS. A JOINT SUPER BOWL FLYOVER AND AN OAKDALE NATIVE IS ONE OF THE PILOTS. HIS NAME IS LIEUTENANT DALTON STEWART. HE IS A NAVY PILOT AND FLIES AN F, A 18 SUPER HORNET. HE’S BASED OUT OF THE NAVAL AIR STATION IN LEMOORE THAT’S JUST SOUTH OF FRESNO. AND HE SAYS A FLYOVER LIKE THIS, IT TAKES A LOT OF PREPARATION AND HAS A BIG FOOTBALL FAN. HE IS LOOKING FORWARD TO SUNDAY CALLING IT A ONCE IN A LIFETIME EXPERIENCE, EXCITED TO BE ABLE TO REPRESENT THE NAVY AND REPRESENT MY HOMETOWN AND WHERE I’M FROM, WHERE I GREW UP, WHAT MADE ME INTO WHAT I AM TODAY TO ON A WORLD STAGE, REALLY. ALL RIGHT, SO HE DIDN’T WANT TO SPOIL

    Oakdale native to pilot in historic Super Bowl LX flyover

    Updated: 10:43 PM PST Feb 5, 2026

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    The Air Force and Navy will perform their first-ever joint Super Bowl flyover at Levi’s Stadium on Sunday, with Oakdale native Lieutenant Dalton Stewart among the pilots.Stewart, a Navy pilot who flies an F/A-18 Super Hornet, is based at the Naval Air Station in Lemoore, south of Fresno. He noted that a flyover like this requires significant preparation. As a big football fan, he is looking forward to Sunday, calling it a once-in-a-lifetime experience.”I’m excited to be able to represent the Navy and represent my hometown and where I’m from, where I grew up, what made me into what I am today on a world stage, really,” Stewart said.He did not want to spoil what’s planned for the flyover but said it should be cool.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

    The Air Force and Navy will perform their first-ever joint Super Bowl flyover at Levi’s Stadium on Sunday, with Oakdale native Lieutenant Dalton Stewart among the pilots.

    Stewart, a Navy pilot who flies an F/A-18 Super Hornet, is based at the Naval Air Station in Lemoore, south of Fresno. He noted that a flyover like this requires significant preparation.

    As a big football fan, he is looking forward to Sunday, calling it a once-in-a-lifetime experience.

    “I’m excited to be able to represent the Navy and represent my hometown and where I’m from, where I grew up, what made me into what I am today on a world stage, really,” Stewart said.

    He did not want to spoil what’s planned for the flyover but said it should be cool.

    See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

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  • After 7 lives were lost in the Biffle plane crash, a chance to heal in Charlotte

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    Even now, 29 days later, it is an almost unimaginable tragedy.

    On Dec. 18, 2025, seven lives were lost in a plane crash in Statesville, 40 miles north of Charlotte. We still don’t know why.

    We do know who, though, and hundreds of people came together Friday morning at Bojangles Coliseum in Charlotte for a memorial service to remember the seven people killed in Statesville. Everyone was there to celebrate the lives of former NASCAR racer Greg Biffle, his wife, Cristina; his children Emma and Ryder, his best friend Craig Wadsworth, and Jack and Dennis Dutton, who were father and son.

    Michael Clinton of Cherryville walks beside one of former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle’s race cars parked outside Bojangles Coliseum on Friday in Charlotte. Three of Biffle’s old race cars were displayed outside prior to a service to remember the seven people killed in a plane crash on Dec. 18, 2025, in Statesville. Biffle, his wife and his two children all lost their lives in the crash.
    Michael Clinton of Cherryville walks beside one of former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle’s race cars parked outside Bojangles Coliseum on Friday in Charlotte. Three of Biffle’s old race cars were displayed outside prior to a service to remember the seven people killed in a plane crash on Dec. 18, 2025, in Statesville. Biffle, his wife and his two children all lost their lives in the crash. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

    The 85-minute service came in front of a crowd of about 600 people. It was open to the public, and so it drew a wide range of mourners. There were men and women in black suits. There were whole families wearing boots, jeans and hoodies. Many of the mourners kept their coats on — it’s hockey season at Bojangles Coliseum, home of the Charlotte Checkers, and the temperature inside wasn’t a whole lot different than the frigid January air they walked through outside.

    But people forgot the temperature as they listened to NASCAR luminaries including Jeff Burton and Phil Parsons eulogize the seven. Other speakers included Greg Biffle’s niece Jordyn Biffle, and his close friend Garrett Mitchell (also known as the YouTube star Cleetus McFarland).

    “He lived life fast and fully, and he loved to make people smile,” Jordyn Biffle said at the service. She was talking about her uncle Greg at that point, but the comment could have been made about any of the seven who died, really. They all were fans of things that went fast — planes, four-wheelers and automobiles.

    Jordyn Biffle, niece of former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle, speaks during a memorial service Friday morning at Bojangles Coliseum in Charlotte.
    Jordyn Biffle, niece of former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle, speaks during a memorial service Friday morning at Bojangles Coliseum in Charlotte. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

    And the smiling part?

    They were all good at that, too. Photos and videos shown on the scoreboard at the service depicted one family after another — both biological ones and racing ones — grinning widely at the camera, and at each other.

    It was Greg Biffle who was the most well-known of the seven, of course, due to his NASCAR championships and, later, his rescue efforts after Hurricane Helene in western North Carolina. It turned out Biffle was quite a prankster, too, as a number of stories revealed from the podium illustrated Friday.

    I had known a little of this already, having asked racer Dale Earnhardt Jr. about Biffle earlier in the week. Dale Jr., it turns out, had once gotten a boxer puppy from Biffle (Dale named the dog Killer). Later, they would tie their boats up together on Lake Norman and shoot the breeze. After they stopped competing on different race teams, they found out they actually had a lot in common.

    “He was a super dude,” Earnhardt told me, “once you got to know him. And man, did he ever like to mess with people.”

    That Biffle did, from a very early age. “The Biff” pranked people and didn’t mind getting pranked himself.

    Former NASCAR driver Jeff Burton speaks during a memorial service Friday morning at Bojangles Coliseum in Charlotte. The ceremony was held to honor the lives lost in the Dec. 18, 2025 plane crash in Statesville that included former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle.
    Former NASCAR driver Jeff Burton speaks during a memorial service Friday morning at Bojangles Coliseum in Charlotte. The ceremony was held to honor the lives lost in the Dec. 18, 2025 plane crash in Statesville that included former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

    The speakers at the service Friday told stories about a high school-aged Biffle doing burnouts in front of his school and getting suspended; of climbing on a closed waterslide and sliding down in the middle of the night as an adult and getting caught; of racing with a broken arm that he and his team tried to hide from his car owner; of losing a bet and having to go sleeveless on a ski trip. And, of course, there was all the humanitarian work Biffle did — under all those high jinks, there was an enormous heart.

    Photos of the seven people who died in a plane crash in Statesville, North Carolina, on Dec. 18, 2025, are displayed during a memorial service at Bojangles Coliseum in Charlotte on Friday.
    Photos of the seven people who died in a plane crash in Statesville, North Carolina, on Dec. 18, 2025, are displayed during a memorial service at Bojangles Coliseum in Charlotte on Friday. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

    As NASCAR president Steve O’Donnell told me earlier this week: “If you asked me who a NASCAR driver is that everyone would want to aspire to be, it’s Greg Biffle. And I don’t mean that just from on track, but just a good guy who was involved in so many things, cared about family and made friends immediately. … That’s why it’s such a huge loss. That’s why you’re seeing this outpouring. Greg reflects the kind of guy a lot of people want to be. If we could have more Greg Biffles in the world and in our garage area, it’d be a great thing for the sport.”

    Garrett Mitchell wipes tears from his eyes as he speaks about his close friend, the late Greg Biffle, on Friday in Charlotte.
    Garrett Mitchell wipes tears from his eyes as he speaks about his close friend, the late Greg Biffle, on Friday in Charlotte. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

    While this memorial service represented closure in some ways, in other ways this wound remains fresh. In one of those acts that makes you lose some faith in the human race, Biffle’s house was reported to have been burglarized Jan. 8, just three weeks after the plane crash. The incident report said $30,000 in cash and a backpack were stolen, along with guns and memorabilia.

    But more than anything else, the mystery of the crash looms.

    We still don’t know what caused it. The National Transportation Safety Board, which is investigating the crash, has yet to say who was piloting the plane at the time of the crash (three people on board had pilot licenses).

    Any day now, though, the NTSB will release its preliminary findings. That report will give everyone a sense as to why that plane left Statesville on a Thursday morning, then immediately turned around and tried to return to the same airport before striking trees and light stanchions, crashing and bursting into flame only 10 minutes after takeoff.

    Jordyn Biffle, niece of former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle, exits the stage after speaking Friday at a remembrance ceremony at Bojangles Coliseum in Charlotte.
    Jordyn Biffle, niece of former NASCAR driver Greg Biffle, exits the stage after speaking Friday at a remembrance ceremony at Bojangles Coliseum in Charlotte. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

    “It’s just such a tragedy,” NASCAR hall of famer Mark Martin told me earlier this week. Martin was a teammate of Biffle on the racetrack and a pilot who has flown Cessnas himself. “And it’s more than Greg. It’s an entire family, and a father and son, and Greg’s friend — such a huge loss. And as a pilot, it’s additionally tough. … Pilots have a pretty good idea of what sort of issues there can be. … And then, of course, my dad and his wife and his daughter died in a plane crash. So it’s a real sore spot for me.”

    Yes, Mark Martin lost three family members in a separate plane crash back in 1998. That is one of a series of plane crashes that have taken the lives of people who were central to NASCAR, or family members of someone who was.

    That is another story for another time, though.

    Friday was about trying to heal and to remember the seven people who died on Dec. 18, 2025. They didn’t deserve what happened. But they were remembered well and fully, on a cold January day in Charlotte.

    This story was originally published January 16, 2026 at 3:33 PM.

    Scott Fowler

    The Charlotte Observer

    Columnist Scott Fowler has written for The Charlotte Observer since 1994. He has earned 24 national APSE sportswriting awards and hosted The Observer’s podcast “Carruth,” which Sports Illustrated once named “Podcast of the Year.” Fowler hosts the online series and podcast “Sports Legends of the Carolinas,” which features 1-on-1 interviews with NC and SC sports icons. He also writes occasionally about non-sports subjects, such as the 5-part series “9/11/74,” which chronicled the plane crash of Eastern Air Lines Flight 212 in Charlotte in 1974.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

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    Scott Fowler

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  • Off-Duty Pilot Who Tried To Cut A Flight’s Engines Midair Is Released Without Prison Time – KXL

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    PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — A former Alaska Airlines pilot who tried to cut the engines of a passenger flight in 2023 while riding off-duty in the cockpit will serve no additional prison time, a federal judge ruled Monday.

    U.S. District Court Judge Amy Baggio sentenced Emerson to time served and supervised release for three years a hearing in Portland, Oregon. Federal prosecutors had asked for one year in prison, while his attorneys had sought probation.

    “Pilots are not perfect. They are human,” she said. “They are people and all people need help sometimes.”

    Emerson was subdued by the flight crew after trying to cut the engines of a Horizon Air flight from Everett, Washington, to San Francisco on Oct. 22, 2023, while he was riding in an extra seat in the cockpit. The plane was diverted to Portland, where it landed safely with more than 80 people on board.

    After his arrest, Emerson told police he was despondent over a friend’s recent death, had taken psychedelic mushrooms about two days earlier, and hadn’t slept in over 40 hours. He has said he believed he was dreaming at the time and that he was trying to wake himself up by grabbing two red handles that would have activated the plane’s fire suppression system and cut off fuel to its engines.

    Before Baggio announced the sentence, Emerson spoke and said he regretted the harm he caused to society.

    “I’m not a victim. I am here as a direct result of my actions,” he told the court. “I can tell you that this very tragic event has forced me to grow as an individual.”

    He hugged his attorneys and shared a tearful embrace with his wife after the judge announced she was releasing him, saying his story “offers a cautionary tale worth telling beyond the confines of this case.”

    Multiple people spoke on Emerson’s behalf at the hearing, including his wife, Sarah Stretch, who told the judge how the incident had impacted their family.

    “I am so sorry for those that it’s impacted as much as it has. But I am extremely proud to be here with this man today, because the growth that he has had from this terrible experience has not only helped him, but benefited all that surround him,” she said through tears. “I just hope people realize that it’s not necessarily the mistake itself but how you respond to it. He has responded with courage, strength and demonstration of extreme resiliency.”

    Joseph Emerson had pleaded guilty or no-contest to all charges against him in September as part of agreements with state and federal prosecutors.

    Emerson, of Pleasant Hill, California, was charged in federal court with interfering with a flight crew. A state indictment in Oregon separately charged him with 83 counts of endangering another person and one count of endangering an aircraft. He was released from custody pending trial in December 2023, with requirements that he undergo mental health services, stay off drugs and alcohol, and keep away from aircraft.

    A state court sentenced him to 50 days in jail, with credit for time served, plus five years of probation, 664 hours of community service — eight hours for each person he endangered — and over $60,000 in restitution, nearly all of it to Alaska Air Group.

    Half of his community service can be performed at the pilot health nonprofit Emerson founded after his arrest. He must also undergo assessments for drug and alcohol and mental health treatment, refrain from using any unprescribed drugs, and keep at least 25 feet (7.6 meters) away from operable aircraft unless he has permission from his probation officer.

    In their sentencing memo asking for one year in prison, federal prosecutors wrote: “It was only through the heroic actions of the flight crew, who were able to physically restrain the defendant and restore normal operations of the aircraft, that no lives were lost that day.”

    In a sentencing memo, his attorneys requested probation with credit for time served over prison or home detention, arguing that the “robust” state prosecution “resulted in substantial punishment.”

    In state court in September, Emerson said he was grateful to the flight crew for restraining him and saving his life, along with those of everyone else on board. He called it “the greatest gift I ever got,” even though he lost his career and wound up in jail, because it forced him to confront his mental health challenges and reliance on alcohol.

    “This difficult journey has made me a better father, a better husband, a better member of my community,” he said.

    The airline has said that other members of the flight crew had not observed signs of impairment that would have barred Emerson from the cockpit.

    The averted disaster renewed attention on cockpit safety and the mental fitness of those allowed in them.

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    Jordan Vawter

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  • What we know about the crew members involved in medical helicopter crash on Sacramento highway

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    Three crew members were injured when a medical helicopter crashed on Highway 50 in Sacramento on Monday night shortly after taking off from the UC Davis Medical Center.Those on board the REACH Air Medical Services H130 included a pilot, nurse and paramedic, and all three were critically injured. No patient was on board. The crash was reported just after 7 p.m. on eastbound Highway 50 just east of Stockton Boulevard. The freeway was closed for hours before crews reopened the roads around 1:20 a.m. Tuesday.Few details are known about the crew members, but friends identified the nurse on board as Suzie Smith, a Redding resident.One of Smith’s friends said the nurse would travel to Nicaragua every year to fix cleft palates and described her as the most giving person she’s ever known.”She’s just one of those exceptional people who’s out there using her, you know, her intelligence in that to help people. But just that type of person who will go over there on her own expense and help those people,” said Mary Beaver, a longtime friend of Smith.Her pastor, Travis Osborne, said Smith remains in critical condition as of Tuesday evening. Osborne told KCRA that she’s being treated for numerous injuries, including brain swelling.”We are just praying for a miracle. We know God hears our prayers, and it’s dire. You know, she’s in a dire situation,” said Osborne.Following the crash, a group of around 15 witnesses and bystanders ran to offer assistance, even lifting the helicopter up to free someone who was trapped. Some even acknowledged to KCRA 3 that they didn’t know if the crashed aircraft would explode. Smith’s friends shared gratitude for the numerous bystanders who rushed into the dangerous crash scene to help.As of Tuesday night, the pilot and paramedic on board the flight have not yet been identified, and officials have not shared any further updates on their injuries. See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

    Three crew members were injured when a medical helicopter crashed on Highway 50 in Sacramento on Monday night shortly after taking off from the UC Davis Medical Center.

    Those on board the REACH Air Medical Services H130 included a pilot, nurse and paramedic, and all three were critically injured. No patient was on board.

    The crash was reported just after 7 p.m. on eastbound Highway 50 just east of Stockton Boulevard. The freeway was closed for hours before crews reopened the roads around 1:20 a.m. Tuesday.

    Few details are known about the crew members, but friends identified the nurse on board as Suzie Smith, a Redding resident.

    One of Smith’s friends said the nurse would travel to Nicaragua every year to fix cleft palates and described her as the most giving person she’s ever known.

    “She’s just one of those exceptional people who’s out there using her, you know, her intelligence in that to help people. But just that type of person who will go over there on her own expense and help those people,” said Mary Beaver, a longtime friend of Smith.

    Her pastor, Travis Osborne, said Smith remains in critical condition as of Tuesday evening. Osborne told KCRA that she’s being treated for numerous injuries, including brain swelling.

    “We are just praying for a miracle. We know God hears our prayers, and it’s dire. You know, she’s in a dire situation,” said Osborne.

    Following the crash, a group of around 15 witnesses and bystanders ran to offer assistance, even lifting the helicopter up to free someone who was trapped. Some even acknowledged to KCRA 3 that they didn’t know if the crashed aircraft would explode.

    Smith’s friends shared gratitude for the numerous bystanders who rushed into the dangerous crash scene to help.

    As of Tuesday night, the pilot and paramedic on board the flight have not yet been identified, and officials have not shared any further updates on their injuries.

    See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel

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  • American Airlines failed to divert 8-hour flight after California man suffered 2 strokes, jury finds

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    A chef from California’s Central Coast who had two strokes while traveling internationally on American Airlines was awarded more than $9 million after a federal jury concluded employees failed to follow their own protocols to help him.

    In November 2021, Jesus Plasencia, a chef from Watsonville who was 67 at the time, was traveling with his wife, Ana Maria Marcela Tavantzis, on a flight to Madrid from Miami, according to a complaint they filed in federal civil court.

    While the plane was still at the gate, Plasencia suffered a “mini stroke” and temporarily lost the ability to speak or pick up his phone, according to the complaint. His wife alerted a flight attendant and the pilot but instead of alerting medical personnel and following company policy, the lawsuit said the pilot dismissed her concerns, “joked with Plasencia, and cleared him for take-off.”

    Plasencia then had a stroke while the plane was in the air; he was hospitalized after the plane landed in Spain and was in critical condition for more than three weeks before he went back to the U.S., according to court documents. He can’t speak or write and now “depends entirely on daily, significant, around-the-clock, in-home care and intensive rehabilitation,” according to the lawsuit.

    On Thursday, a federal jury in San Jose said American Airlines was on the hook for $9.6 million for its employees failing to follow company protocol in the incident.

    According to the complaint filed in 2023, the flight crew had asked other passengers to monitor Plasencia after he suffered a stroke during the flight, but didn’t tell the pilot about the medical emergency, so the flight wasn’t diverted.

    The couple argued that because American Airlines crew hadn’t followed protocols, Plasencia was delayed getting care for nearly eight hours and could’ve potentially had a better outcome, according to the lawsuit.

    “The safety and well-being of our passengers is our highest priority,” American Airlines said in a statement. “While we respect the jury’s decision, we disagree with the verdict and are currently evaluating next steps.”

    Darren Nicholson of Burns Charest, who represented the couple in the lawsuit, argued that the airline didn’t follow stroke protocol, which calls for immediate medical assistance and diverting the aircraft.

    “It is shocking that American Airlines responded so poorly to a medical emergency like this,” he said in a statement.

    American Airlines was found liable by the jurors under the Montreal Convention, an international treaty that governs international air travel.

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    Summer Lin

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  • Pilot killed in midair plane collision in Lancaster

    Pilot killed in midair plane collision in Lancaster

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    A pilot was killed after two small-engine planes collided in midair over Lancaster on Sunday afternoon, officials said.

    Federal authorities said Sunday that they were looking into the crash, which a Los Angeles County sheriff’s spokesperson said occurred about 12:50 p.m.

    Firefighters arrived at the scene of a downed plane near 47th Street East and Avenue F about 1:20 p.m., said L.A. County Fire Capt. Sheila Kelliher-Berkoh. A second downed aircraft was near 60th Street East and Avenue G, Kelliher-Berkoh said.

    One of the pilots was pronounced dead at the scene, but the other pilot was uninjured, she said. Although details of the incident were scarce Sunday afternoon, it appears the two planes collided above Lancaster, Kelliher-Berkoh said.

    It wasn’t known Sunday afternoon what caused the crash, she said.

    No passengers were on either plane.

    The National Transportation Safety Board “is investigating the midair collision of a Yakovlev Yak-52 and Nanchang CJ-6A near Lancaster,” the agency said in a statement Sunday afternoon.

    The Yak-52 is a single-engine craft designed in the 1970s in the Soviet Union. The CJ-6A was originally produced in the 1960s for the Chinese military. Both are known to be used in aerobatics.

    City News Service contributed to this report.

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    Matthew Ormseth

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  • A helicopter halts traffic on the 110 Freeway in South Los Angeles

    A helicopter halts traffic on the 110 Freeway in South Los Angeles

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    A helicopter made an emergency landing on the 110 Freeway in South Los Angeles on Thursday night, bringing southbound traffic to a halt for hours.

    The California Highway Patrol received a report at 8:25 p.m. from the craft’s pilot, who said he was forced down by a loss of power, CHP Officer Sean Lough told The Times.

    Besides the pilot, two passengers were aboard the private helicopter. No injuries were reported.

    All southbound lanes were closed from Century Boulevard to the 105 Freeway, Lough said.

    The CHP was coordinating with the pilot and two heavy-duty tow trucks to remove the aircraft. Lough said the lanes were expected to reopen shortly before 11 p.m.

    KCAL-TV reported that Flight Tracker showed that the flight originated at Hawthorne Municipal Airport about 7:34 p.m.

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    Doug Smith

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  • Unbelievable facts

    Unbelievable facts

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    A survey revealed that 56% of commercial pilots admitted to sleeping while flying, with 29% waking…

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  • Matt Bomer Says He Lost Out On Playing Superman After Being Outed

    Matt Bomer Says He Lost Out On Playing Superman After Being Outed

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    There have been as many failed attempts to get Superman onto the silver screen as there are Superman movies that actually made it—but Superman: Flyby is perhaps one of the most infamous, just for the sheer capacity of what-could-have-beens with the amount of people up for the titular heroic role. Matt Bomer was the man who flew closest to Krypton—but believes that he ultimately lost out for being in the closet.

    “I went in on a cattle call for Superman, and then it turned into a one-month audition experience where I was auditioning again and again and again. It looked like I was the director’s choice for the role. This was a very early iteration of Superman written by J.J. Abrams, called Superman: Flyby, and it never came to light,” Bomer recently reflected on an episode of The Hollywood Reporter’s Awards Chatter podcast. At the time, the project known as Flyby was being helmed by Brett Ratner, who’d been hired by Warner to make the movie in 2002. Ratner saw Bomer as his perfect choice for Clark Kent, with the actor noting that he ultimately had signed a three-picture deal. Things fell apart, and Ratner went on to leave the project himself shortly thereafter—but Bomer believes that his sexuality played a part in why the studio was suddenly disinterested in him being the new Man of Steel.

    “That was a time in the industry when something like that could still really be weaponized against you,” Bomer, who publicly came out as gay in 2012, continued. “How, and why, and who, I don’t know, but yeah, that’s my understanding.” Ratner departed Flyby in 2003 and was replaced by McG, who rebuilt Flyby from the ground up, including casting, only to eventually leave as well—setting the stage for Bryan Singer’s eventual reboot of the project as Superman Returns, now starring Brandon Routh, in 2006.

    This isn’t the first time it’s been suggested that Bomer missed out on Superman because of his sexuality—after Bomer publicly came out in 2012, author Jackie Collins stated in an interview with Gaydar Radio that being closeted cost Bomer the role years prior. But studio sources pushed back on the allegation at the time, citing that Bomer’s deal for Flyby and potential sequels fell through due to Ratner exiting the project.

    Whatever the reason, Bomer himself still at least believes that being outed to studio executives at least played a role even today—but even if he didn’t make it into Flyby, he got to proverbially don the blue-and-red supersuit, playing Superman in the 2013 DCAU animated movie, Superman: Unbound. At the very least, Bomer would go on to play a part in in the DC Universe that actually got to reflect his experience as a gay man, playing the closeted test pilot Larry Trainor, a.k.a. Negative Man, in the excellent Doom Patrol TV series.


    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    James Whitbrook

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  • ‘The Traitors’ Episodes 9-10 With Pilot Pete

    ‘The Traitors’ Episodes 9-10 With Pilot Pete

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    Photo by: Aaron Poole/E! Entertainment/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images

    Pilot Pete digs into all the drama, strategy, and emotion of his gameplay on ‘The Traitors’ Season 2

    Johnny is joined by the Savior of the Faithfuls, Pilot Pete, to dig into all the drama, strategy, and emotion of his gameplay on The Traitors Season 2.

    Host: Johnny Bananas
    Guest: Peter Weber
    Producer: Sasha Ashall

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    Johnny Bananas

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  • 5 Marines aboard helicopter that crashed outside San Diego are confirmed dead, military says

    5 Marines aboard helicopter that crashed outside San Diego are confirmed dead, military says

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    Five U.S. Marines aboard a helicopter that went down during stormy weather in the mountains outside San Diego are confirmed dead, a Marine commander said Thursday.

    It was the second fatal crash for Marines in Southern California involving a Sikorsky CH-53E Super Stallion, a heavy lift helicopter, in the last six years. The Marines said an investigation into the latest crash is underway.

    Authorities say the aircraft vanished late Tuesday while returning to Marine Corps Air Station Miramar in San Diego after a routine training mission to Creech Air Force Base in Indian Springs, Nev., northwest of Las Vegas. The helicopter was flying into treacherous weather in California, which had been inundated with three days of relentless rain.

    “It is with a heavy heart and profound sadness that I share the loss of five outstanding Marines from 3d Marine Aircraft Wing and the ‘Flying Tigers,’” Maj. Gen. Michael J. Borgschulte, commander of 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing, said in a statement.

    The names of those killed will not be released until 24 hours after next of kin are notified, officials said.

    “To the families of our fallen Marines, we send our deepest condolences and commit to ensuring your support and care during this incredibly difficult time,” Borgschulte said. “Though we understand the inherent risks of military service, any loss of life is always difficult.”

    Those aboard the flight were assigned to Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron 361, Marine Aircraft Group 16, according to the Marines.

    In a statement, President Biden said he and First Lady Jill Biden “extend our deepest condolences to their families, their squadron, and the U.S. Marine Corps as we grieve the loss of five of our nation’s finest warriors.” He also thanked the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department, the U.S. Air Force Auxiliary-Civil Air Patrol, and other federal, state, and local agencies for helping in the search and recovery efforts.

    “Our service members represent the very best of our nation — and these five Marines were no exception,” Biden said. “Today, as we mourn this profound loss, we honor their selfless service and ultimate sacrifice — and reaffirm the sacred obligation we bear to all those who wear the uniform and their families.”

    As the Marines were flying back to their base Tuesday night, visibility was poor because of snow, rain and gusty winds, according to meteorologist Philip Gonsalves with the National Weather Service in San Diego. Those conditions would have been in play for most of the night and into the morning, Gonsalves said.

    The craft was discovered Wednesday morning near Pine Valley, in the Cuyamaca Mountains an hour’s drive from San Diego. The Marines said an effort to recover the remains of the five has begun.

    The California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection received word about the missing helicopter at 2:20 a.m. Wednesday and began the search in the area of Lake Morena, but their efforts were hampered by heavy snow and mud, officials said.

    In 2018, four Marines died in a helicopter crash 15 miles west of El Centro. The crew flew out of a base in Twentynine Palms as part of a training exercise on April 3 on the same type of heavy-lift helicopter that was reported missing Wednesday, according to a news release from the 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing.

    Two years after the crash, the families of the four Marines sued the manufacturers who supplied parts to the military. A Marine Corps investigation into the crash ruled out pilot error and pointed to a bypass valve as the root cause of the crash, the news outlet Marine Corps Times reported when the lawsuit was filed.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.



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    Nathan Solis, Jon Healey

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  • A loud boom, a blast of icy wind and sheer terror on Alaska Airlines Flight 1282

    A loud boom, a blast of icy wind and sheer terror on Alaska Airlines Flight 1282

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    The airplane was three miles into the sky and still climbing when passengers heard the boom and felt the blast of icy wind. A chunk of the metal membrane separating the 171 passengers and six crew members from the freezing mid-troposphere had unexpectedly “departed the airplane,” as transportation officials clinically put it.

    No serious injuries were reported aboard Alaska Airlines Flight 1282, which made an emergency landing at Portland International Airport in Oregon on Friday night with a door-shaped gap in its side and a cabin full of frightened people.

    But transportation officials say the midair blowout could have been calamitous if it had happened a little later in the flight, when the plane was at cruising altitude with passengers unbuckled and walking around.

    “We are very, very fortunate here that this didn’t end up in something more tragic,” said Jennifer Homendy, chair of the National Transportation Safety Board, the federal agency responsible for investigating transportation accidents.

    “I imagine this was a pretty terrifying event,” Homendy said. “We don’t often talk about psychological injury, but I’m sure that occurred here.”

    The airliner was a new one, a Boeing 737 Max 9 that went into service late last year. Investigators will try to figure out what caused one of its so-called plug doors — described by some experts as “fake doors” — to be ripped loose in the air above Oregon.

    With 178 seats, the plane is not required to have emergency exit doors at the spot, so builders installed sealed panels where the doors otherwise would have stood on each side.

    Investigators are searching for the missing plug door, which is believed to have landed near the Cedar Hills neighborhood of Greater Portland. The NTSB is asking anyone who finds it to contact police.

    Alaska Airlines said Sunday that all 65 of its Max 9s were grounded, and that it had canceled 170 flights Sunday affecting 25,000 passengers. On Saturday, United Airlines said it had grounded all 79 of its Boeing 737 Max 9 aircraft for inspection, and that 270 flights were canceled over the weekend as a result of Friday night’s incident.

    Flight 1282 left Portland International Airport just after 5 p.m. Friday, headed to Ontario International in Southern California on an expected two-hour flight. It was traveling about 440 mph , at an altitude of about 16,000 feet, and had been airborne about 10 minutes.

    Then passengers heard what some called a boom and some called a pop, as the faux door flew off and exposed bare insulation around it. Some passengers screamed and hurried to put on oxygen masks that had dropped. One passenger told KTLA-Channel 5 that the blowout ripped the shirt completely off a teenage boy.

    The blowout ripped the headrests off some seats. There were seven empty seats in the plane, authorities said, and by a stroke of luck the two closest to the hole — 26A and 26B — happened to be empty.

    An audio recording between the pilot and an air traffic controller describes what happened next. The pilot calmly explained that the plane had depressurized and needed to return to Portland International.

    “We’re now leveling 12,000 and left turn heading 340,” the pilot said. “We do have information zero. We’d like to get lower, if possible …”

    “Did you declare an emergency?” asked the air traffic controller. “Or did you just need to return to …”

    “Yes, we are emergency. We are depressurized. We do need to return back to … Our fuel is 18,900 pounds and we have 177 passengers on board.”

    “Do you need time to burn off some fuel before you land?”

    “Negative.”

    “Are you ready to approach now?”

    The pilot said the plane was about 10 minutes away.

    “Roger. Just let me know when you’re ready,” the air traffic controller said.

    “We’ll let you know. Alaska 1282.”

    “The only information we have is a depressurization issue. … The emergency aircraft will be the next arrival,” the air traffic controller said. “They are on a two-mile final. And you can expect access to the runway.”

    Passengers applauded as the plane landed safely, about 13 minutes after the blowout.

    The Associated Press contributed to this story.

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    Christopher Goffard

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  • This Pilot's Incredible Instagram Shows Earth From The Sky

    This Pilot's Incredible Instagram Shows Earth From The Sky

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    The celestial sky has entranced humans for thousands of years, now one man is capturing it from the sky. This pilot’s incredible Instragam show earth from the sky.  Christiaan van Heijst has the eye to snap the magic and is sharing it with the public. He draws lots of attention for what he does in the cockpit of thejets he flies.

    A self-described traveler, airline pilot, adventurer, photographer and admirer of natural light, the 34-year-old has racked up tens of thousands of Instagram followers for the stunning pictures he takes 38,000 feet above earth.

    A senior first officer on the Boeing 747-8 and 747-400 Freighter, Heijst has also logged thousands of hours of flying time and a photo roll that would make astronauts jealous.

    RELATED: 7 Instagram Pro-Tips For The Best Food Feed

    According to one of his photos, Heijst says you won’t find a photo of him on his IG account: “I absolutely prefer to stay behind the camera instead of in front of it. My photos should not be about me and my ego, but about the views that that I capture and the moods I try to convey.”

    The closest thing to a selfie is a photo of his hand with the caption, “Flying under a blue super moon, we are crossing central Iran and the whole world is illuminated by the major lunar lightbulb that casts her magic all over the world. Ever since I was young I’ve always been in awe of the moon and her special light. On nights like these, where Im am one of the very few privileged people to see the planet from 38.000ft, I let my hand rest on the glare shield in front of me and play with the delicate light and shadows from the moon above.

    “I love night flights like these. A private show of the most beautiful light and landscapes I could wish for.”

    RELATED: 9 Adorable Dogs That Have A Better Instagram Account Than You

    Heijst says he still considers himself privileged to fly for a living and enjoy a life in the sky. You can find out more about him (and see what he looks like!) on his blog.

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    Amy Hansen

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  • Prestige HOF: The ‘Studio 60’ Pilot With Bill Simmons and Chris Ryan

    Prestige HOF: The ‘Studio 60’ Pilot With Bill Simmons and Chris Ryan

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    ‌Bill and Chris join together to honor Matthew Perry by celebrating the success of the Studio 60 pilot. They discuss the impressive chemistry between Perry and costar Bradley Whitford, highlight the end of a television era with the shift from 22-episode seasons to more unscripted content, and explore the complicated history of Aaron Sorkin’s work.

    ‌Hosts: Bill Simmons and Chris Ryan
    Producer: Jack Sanders

    Subscribe: Spotify

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    Bill Simmons

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  • Pilot’s ‘breakdown’ is a reminder: Many fear seeking mental health help, advocates say

    Pilot’s ‘breakdown’ is a reminder: Many fear seeking mental health help, advocates say

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    After an off-duty pilot who said he had struggled with depression for months tried to shut off fuel to a plane’s engines midair, industry advocates are drawing renewed attention to the difficulties pilots face dealing with mental health issues.

    The Federal Aviation Administration’s tight regulations and reliance on pilot “self-reporting,” advocates say, create a culture in which aviators bottle up their problems instead of reporting them and seeking treatment.

    “If you mention that you have a mental health issue or problem, you have basically lost your job,” said Ross Aimer, chief executive of Aero Consulting Experts and a former United Airlines pilot. “Although we are supposed to self-disclose any mental issues, any drugs that we take to fix our mental issues, the minute you report that, you are basically off flying status and you may lose your job.”

    The focus on pilot mental health follows the arrest of off-duty pilot Joseph Emerson, 44, who was charged in federal and state court in Oregon this week after he attempted to pull a Horizon Air plane’s red fire handles while sitting in the jump seat in the cockpit.

    “I am not OK,” Emerson said after he had been casually engaging the two pilots in conversation, according to the FBI in a criminal complaint unsealed Tuesday.

    Then he grabbed onto the fire handles, which are used to extinguish engine fires and will shut off all fuel to the engines, essentially turning the plane into a glider, the pilots told investigators. The flight’s pilots wrestled with Emerson and kicked him out of the cockpit. He was cuffed by flight attendants and arrested when the plane landed.

    Emerson, who is due to be arraigned in federal court Thursday, told police he had been suffering from depression for six months and took psychedelic mushrooms 48 hours before the flight. He also told investigators that he was in the midst of a “nervous breakdown” and that he had not slept in 40 hours, according to the complaint.

    Though Alaska Airlines said Emerson had completed all mandated FAA medical evaluations and was never suspended, researchers believe that pilots like Emerson underreport issues such as depression.

    “Underreporting of mental health symptoms and diagnoses is probable among airline pilots due to the public stigma of mental illness and fear among pilots of being ‘grounded’ or not fit for duty,” wrote researchers with Harvard University’s T.H. Chan School of Public Health in a 2016 study.

    The study followed the 2015 Germanwings crash that killed 150 in France. The pilot in that crash, Andreas Lubitz, also suffered from depression. He intentionally crashed the plane into a mountain after locking his co-pilot out of the cockpit.

    Although it occurred in Europe, the Germanwings crash led the FAA to establish a committee to reevaluate the way it assesses pilot mental health, which led to a few changes, but not a substantial overhaul of the way the industry treats mental health issues, according to researchers.

    “We thought more would be done at that time. We thought more resources would become available to pilots,” said Deborah Donnelly-McLay, a pilot and researcher with Harvard University who contributed to the 2016 Pilot Health Study.

    “Nothing was being done that really changed the landscape of mental health treatment,” Donnelly-McLay said.

    The study Donnelly-McLay co-authored focused on data compiled from 2,000 anonymous pilots’ responses to a survey. It found that 12.4% of pilots may be clinically depressed. Even more alarmingly, the survey found that about 4% of pilots had suicidal ideations at times. In Europe, about 17% of pilots suffer from depression, according to a Trinity College survey spearheaded by pilot Paul Cullen.

    Still, many pilots do not report their depression.

    “The real issue is the job security and the fear of loss of earnings,” Cullen said his report found.

    But the FAA says that fear over reporting mental health issues is a “perceived risk.”

    “We’re doing our best at the FAA to make that clear,” former FAA administrator Steve Dickson said at the University of North Dakota Mental Health Summit in 2021.

    “It is a misconception that if you report a mental health issue, you will never fly again. … It’s just not true,” he said.

    Dickson emphasized a renewed focus on “aircrew peer support networks, where pilots with concerns could talk to other pilots who were specifically trained to help.”

    Despite the FAA’s insistence that mental health issues can be reported, barriers still exist for struggling pilots.

    The FAA still does not allow pilots to take many antidepressants. And even those drugs that pilots are allowed to take for depression “are acceptable on a case by case basis,” according to the FAA.

    “Approval for any psychiatric drug is very strict and does not permit applicants to be approved by an [Aviation Medical Examiner] or even the FAA office in Oklahoma City. These cases are decided by the FAA office in Washington, D.C. and many cases are not approved for a variety of reasons,” the FAA says in its list of accepted medications.

    Donnelly-McLay believes the FAA has to treat mental health issues the way the airline industry handled alcohol and substance abuse.

    In 1974, the Air Line Pilots Assn. created the Human Intervention Motivational Study, or HIMS, using a grant to treat pilots with alcohol and substance use disorders.

    Now, the majority of American airlines refer pilots to HIMS programs that work with the FAA to get pilots treatment. More than 5,400 pilots with alcohol or substance use disorders have been treated through HIMS and returned to the air after successful completion of the program.

    Before HIMS, many of the same issues existed related to pilot underreporting of substance use disorders.

    “Prior to 1974, the FAA had no practical rehabilitative protocol to accommodate a recovering pilot and return him/her to work with safety. To identify an alcoholic pilot meant suspension or revocation of the medical certification and immediate loss of income,” according to the HIMS website.

    In its 48-page report on pilot mental health after the Germanwings crash, the FAA report “investigated the concept of developing a pilot mental fitness-focused ASAP-like program” like HIMS.

    “Consensus among the group as to the ability to implement such a program was not found,” the authors of the report wrote.

    Certain airlines have their own programs. Alaska Airlines said it had internal programs to handle pilots with mental health issues, but the company did not immediately elaborate.

    Aimer said it takes incidents like the Alaska Airlines flight to bring the FAA’s attention back to the critical issue.

    “We are all human and we have our portion of alcoholics, mental issues,” Aimer said. “The FAA needs to do some serious soul searching and find a solution for this.”

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    Noah Goldberg

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  • Off-duty pilot may have been on psychedelic mushrooms when he tried to shut off plane engines, official says

    Off-duty pilot may have been on psychedelic mushrooms when he tried to shut off plane engines, official says

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    The FBI is investigating whether an off-duty pilot who tried to shut down the engines of an in-flight jetliner on Sunday was on psychedelic mushrooms, an official told The Times.

    Federal prosecutors in Oregon have charged Joseph Emerson, 44, with interference with flight crew members and attendants. Emerson was arrested after pilots and crew members detained him Sunday following an outburst in the cockpit during a Horizon Airlines flight from Seattle that was headed to San Francisco. Horizon Airlines is a regional carrier owned by the parent company that owns Alaska Airlines.

    In a criminal complaint unsealed Tuesday, an FBI agent revealed that Emerson told investigators about his use of psychedelic mushrooms and said “it was his first time taking mushrooms.”

    But FBI officials declined to confirm that Emerson had taken mushrooms at the time of the midair incident.

    “It is vague in [the complaint], but that is part of what [the] FBI is investigating,” said Joy Jiras, an FBI Portland field office spokesperson. “The FBI is investigating the timeline of his use of magic mushrooms. We are trying to figure out whether he was on them that day or whether they were in his system or not.”

    Emerson had been flying in the “jump seat,” a foldout seat usually placed behind the captain’s seat, according to experts.

    “I am not OK,” Emerson said during the flight, after he had been casually engaging the two pilots in conversation, a federal agent said in the complaint.

    Both pilots then saw Emerson grab onto the red fire handles, which are used to extinguish engine fires and shut down all fuel to the engines, potentially turning the plane into a glider, the pilots told federal investigators.

    One pilot struggled with Emerson for about 25 or 30 seconds before the off-duty pilot “quickly settled down,” according to the complaint.

    The other pilot saw Emerson throw his headset across the cockpit before saying he was not OK.

    The pilots said the interaction with Emerson lasted about 90 seconds before they were able to remove him and secure the cockpit, the complaint said.

    Flight attendants then saw Emerson “peacefully walking to the back of the aircraft,” the complaint said. They had received a call from the pilots saying that Emerson was “losing it,” and he told one attendant that he “just got kicked out of the flight deck,” according to investigators.

    “You need to cuff me right now, or it’s going to be bad,” he told the attendant.

    He was cuffed and seated in the back of the plane, according to the complaint, where he tried to grab the handle of an emergency exit before he was stopped by a crew member.

    Another crew member said that Emerson made statements about how “he tried to kill everybody,” the complaint said.

    “The flight attendant noticed Emerson take out his cellular phone and appeared to be texting on the phone. Emerson was heard saying he had just put 84 peoples’ lives at risk tonight including his own,” FBI Agent Tapara Simmons wrote in the complaint.

    After the plane made an emergency landing in Portland, Ore., Emerson was detained. He told police he had become depressed six months ago, according to the complaint.

    He talked with the officer about “the use of psychedelic mushrooms” and said “it was his first time taking mushrooms.”

    “I’m admitting to what I did. I’m not fighting any charges you want to bring against me, guys,” he told police, according to the complaint.

    Emerson was booked by police in Multnomah County on suspicion of 83 counts of attempted murder. It was not clear whether the state case would continue in light of federal charges.

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    Noah Goldberg

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  • With Roiland Out, Rick And Morty Fans Are ‘Auditioning’ For Season 7

    With Roiland Out, Rick And Morty Fans Are ‘Auditioning’ For Season 7

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    Screenshot: Adult Swim

    Yesterday, the news dropped that Rick and Morty co-creator Justin Roiland had not only been dropped from the hit TV show by Adult Swim, but also that he was resigning from High on Life studio Squanch Games, which he co-founded. This all comes as Roiland faces two felony domestic abuse charges from 2020. Instead of leaving Adult Swim high and dry as it faces the challenge of carrying on Rick and Morty without the man who voiced a great many of its characters, a sizeable chunk of fans took it upon themselves to submit mock audition tapes for the now-vacant roles of Rick Sanchez and Morty Smith.

    Prior to the shitstorm of Justin Roiland news revelations, Roiland voiced a multitude of voices in Rick and Morty and in last year’s Game Pass hit, High on Life. Back in 2018, while Rick and Morty was in its third season, Adult Swim forged a long-term deal with creators Dan Harmon and Roiland for 70 additional new episodes of the adult animated series, according to Deadline. Following yesterday’s news, The Hollywood Reporter has said that Roiland’s voice roles will be re-cast and Dan Harmon will remain the sole showrunner through season 10.

    Like the old adage of uncertainty breeding opportunity, Rick and Morty fans are throwing their hat in the ring by submitting audition tapes for its titular characters. Unlike the “Get Schwifty” episode of Rick and Morty (fuck me for remembering that), candidates by and large aren’t taking the auditions seriously, which is honestly pretty on brand for Roiland’s vocal performances. Here are a couple of standout performances that would make Cromulon nod in approval.

    Now that I’ve sent my editor an email for financial compensation for the emotional damage writing this article has dealt me, I’d like to earmark two alternative solutions for Rick and Morty’s “lack of a lotta voiced roles” situation.

    Twitter user Shinimomi suggested Rick and Morty take a page out of the prolific comedy anime series Pop Team Epic’s book by having random celebrities voice characters every episode. That way Adult Swim can keep things fresh by having a pool of notable actors (preferably those who aren’t alleged sex pests) rotate throughout the show’s next “100 Years.”

    Ian Boudreau, PC Gamer’s senior news writer, suggested the novel idea that the role of Rick should go to Garth Marengi’s Dark Place and What We Do In The Shadows actor Matt Berry. Perfect, no notes. If he’s not available, I know of a certain regular human bartender that goes by the name of Jackie Daytona who’s looking for work.

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    Isaiah Colbert

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  • Weird Facts

    Weird Facts

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    In 1943, a Luftwaffe pilot came across a crippled B-17 trying to make it home after a bomb run. Instead of shooting it down, the German pilot escorted it home. The pilots met up 50 years later and became friends, and both died within a few months of each other.

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  • History of Russian MiGs in the U.S. Revealed by the World’s First Civilian Pilot to Own and Operate One

    History of Russian MiGs in the U.S. Revealed by the World’s First Civilian Pilot to Own and Operate One

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    Press Release


    Oct 25, 2022

    In his second book, Mr. MiG and the Real Story of the First MiGs in America, author and pilot Paul T. Entrekin gives the reader firsthand knowledge of the mysterious Russian MiG – among the world’s first jet fighters.

    After serving from 1977-1986 in the United States Marine Corps as a both a rotary and fixed-wing pilot and flight instructor, Entrekin resigned his active-duty position and opted to retain a reserve commission. His post-military goal was to make a career in the airshow business. 

    A Canadian friend let him know that a man was about to import a few Russian MiGs into Ottawa. As Entrekin explains in his book, “[I] was searching for that X factor or niche that allows entry-level performers to get their foot in the door with show sponsors.” Thus started his 20-year illustrious career with the notorious Russian jet, flying professionally at airshows all around North America while entertaining millions of spectators and setting multiple U.S. and world airspeed records.

    The author gives the reader a bird’s eye view of the challenges that it took to get a MiG pilot certification, assess and certify the safety of the aircraft, and overcome the general fear and prejudice of having a Russian jet in American airspace, even if it was being piloted by one of our own men. 

    This book is a must-read for anyone interested in aviation history, current aviation, fighter jets, MiGs, or the military.

    Paul T. Entrekin, also known by the moniker “Mr. MiG,” became a commissioned officer in 1977 in the U.S. Marine Corps and earned his wings of gold in 1980. After accepting a reserve commission in 1986, he worked as a clandestine operative for the Defense Intelligence Agency until his retirement from the service in 1991.

    Also in 1986, he started Entrekin Aviation and flew his MiG in his first airshow a year later. In 1989, he accepted a position as a pilot with Delta Airlines.

    Paul earned a bachelor of science from Auburn University and a master of education from University of West Florida. He is a member of the Society for Experimental Test Pilots, has received numerous civilian and military awards, and is recognized on the National Aviation and Space Exploration Wall of Honor.

    Order Today for $0.99 promotional special on Amazon. Click Here.

    Publisher: Paul Entrekin
    Release date: Oct. 25, 2022
    ISBN: 978-1-63337-678-6 (Paperback)
    ISBN: 978-1-63337-679-3 (Hardback)
    ISBN: 978-1-63337-680-9 (eBook)

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    Source: Paul Entrekin, author

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