Jonathan Rhys Meyers uses N-word against airline staff: Report

Washington, May 18 (ANI): Actor Jonathan Rhys Meyers was banned from boarding a United Airlines flight after he used racial slurs against an employee last month in a drunken outburst.

As per reports from RadarOnline.com, the Irish actor, star “The Tudors,” reportedly used the “N” word when he was reprimanded for drunk and disorderly conduct inside a first class lounge earlier this month, says Fox News.

Meyers was accused of drinking excessively in the wee hours at New York City’s JFK airport while waiting to board a flight to Los Angeles.

The employees didn’t allow him to get on the flight on seeing his quarrelsome behaviour, following which shouted the ‘N word’ at them.

This is not the first time Meyers has landed in trouble.

After his second stint in rehab, Meyers was arrested in 2007 at a Dublin airport for allegedly being drunk, but the charges were dropped later.

Two years later, just three months out of his third stint, he was arrested for allegedly attacking staff in a Paris airport bar. (ANI)

Man in custody after disturbance on U.S. flight

A passenger on a United Airlines flight from Washington to Denver sparked a security alert on Wednesday after he was apparently caught smoking in the toilet and made a remark that was perceived as a threat.

Officials said a Qatari man was in custody but the incident did not appear to be serious.

United Airlines Flight 663, which originated from Washington’s Reagan National Airport, landed safely in Denver about 9 p.m. EDT (0100 GMT on Thursday) after two F-16 fighter jets intercepted the Boeing 757 aircraft, according to the North American Aerospace Defense Command responsible for safeguarding U.S. airspace.

“It looks like the individual in question was perhaps smoking in the lavatory and might have made an unfortunate remark” when confronted by airline personnel, a U.S. official said.

U.S. officials have been on heightened alert and have ramped up security substantially since Christmas Day last year after a Nigerian man tried but failed to blow up a flight from Amsterdam to Detroit with a bomb hidden in his underwear.

ABC News, citing federal law enforcement officials, had reported earlier that U.S. air marshals subdued a Qatari man who authorities say tried to “light his shoes on fire” on the flight, sparking fears of another attack.

CNN said no explosives were found on board and identified the man as a mid-level Qatari diplomat. When asked why he was in the toilet so long, he “said something about lighting his shoe on fire,” the network reported.

U.S. officials could not confirm that report. The plane was surrounded by security vehicles when it arrived at Denver International Airport.

“Law enforcement and TSA have responded to the scene and the passenger is currently in custody,” the Transportation Security Administration said in a statement. “All steps are being taken to ensure the safety of the traveling public.”

There were 157 passengers aboard the plane and six crew members, according to United Air.

Attempts to reach the Qatari Embassy in Washington were not immediately successful.

U.S. officials have tracked the December plane incident back to al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. This has led them to step up efforts to combat the militant group in Yemen where the Nigerian man told investigators he trained and obtained the bomb.

Additionally, TSA has beefed up security since that incident, requiring some passengers to undergo full-body scans at airports.

Just months after hijackers crashed planes into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001, Richard Reid, a Briton and self-admitted member of al Qaeda, was subdued on an trans-Atlantic flight diverted to Boston after attempting to detonate explosives hidden in his shoes.

Reid pleaded guilty to eight counts related to terrorism and was sentenced to life in prison with no possibility of parole.

(Reporting by Jeremy Pelofsky, Tabassum Zakaria and John Crawley; Editing by Peter Cooney and Philip Barbara)

No explosives found on Denver flight – CNN

Authorities found no explosives in the shoes of a Qatari man arrested after a United Airlines flight landed safely in Denver following a reported disturbance, CNN reported, quoting sources.

The Transportation Security Administration said in a statement it was “monitoring an incident on board United Airlines flight 663 … DEN after receiving initial reports that a Federal Air Marshal responded to a passenger possibly causing a disturbance on board this aircraft.”

ABC News, citing federal law enforcement officials, reported earlier that U.S. air marshals subdued a Qatari diplomat who authorities say tried to “light his shoes on fire” on the flight from Washington Reagan National Airport.

U.S. plane alert likely sparked by smoking in toilet

A man detained on a United Airlines flight from Washington to Denver was possibly smoking in the lavatory and not trying to set off explosives in his shoes as initially reported, a U.S. official said.

“It looks like the individual in question was perhaps smoking in the lavatory and might have made an unfortunate remark once confronted by airline personnel,” a U.S. official said.

Initial media reports said a Qatari man was subdued by U.S. air marshals after trying to “light his shoes on fire.”

United flight 663 landed safely in Denver and the man was taken into custody, the Transportation Security Administration said.

(Reporting by Jeremy Pelofsky; Editing by John O’Callaghan)

United flight lands safely, passenger in custody

A United Airlines flight from Washington landed safely in Denver on Wednesday night and a passenger was taken into custody after reports of a possible disturbance on the flight, U.S. security officials said.

ABC News, citing federal law enforcement officials, reported that U.S. air marshals subdued a Qatari man who authorities say tried to “light his shoes on fire” on United Flight 663 from Washington Reagan National Airport.

The plane was surrounded by security vehicles at Denver International Airport. ABC said authorities identified the suspect as a diplomat in the Qatari Embassy in Washington.

“TSA is monitoring an incident on board United Airlines flight 663 … after receiving initial reports that a Federal Air Marshal responded to a passenger possibly causing a disturbance on board this aircraft,” the Transportation Security Administration said in a statement.

On Christmas Day 2009, a Nigerian man was arrested for trying to set off explosives hidden in his underwear on a flight from Amsterdam to Detroit.

In December 2001, Richard Reid, a self-admitted member of al Qaeda, was subdued on an trans-Atlantic flight diverted to Boston. He had been attempting to detonate explosives hidden in his shoes. Reid pleaded guilty to eight counts related to terrorism and was sentenced to life in prison with no possibility of parole.

Qatari man subdued on Washington-Denver flight – TV

U.S. air marshals subdued a Qatari man who authorities say tried to “light his shoes on fire” on a United Airlines flight from Washington to Denver on Wednesday night, ABC News reported, citing federal law enforcement officials.

Media reports said the plane had landed safely at Denver International Airport and was surrounded by security vehicles.

Lavatory Fire Forces Chicago-Bound Flight to Land

CHEEKTOWAGA, N.Y. — Authorities say a Chicago-bound flight made an unscheduled stop in Buffalo after a water pump caught fire in a lavatory.

United Airlines Flight 769 had taken off from nearby Rochester shortly before the incident at about 8 a.m. Friday.

A Buffalo Niagara International Airport spokesman says a flight attendant quickly extinguished the small fire. But with smoke in the cabin, the pilots decided to land.

None of the 127 people on board was injured. Passengers were put on another plane and continued on to Chicago.

Pitt enjoys chicken and beer while flying mile high

Melbourne, Sep 10 (ANI): While meeting Hollywood’s hottest hunk remains a dream for some, a passenger on a United Airlines flight was able to not only meet actor Brad Pitt but also film him.

Justin Ross Lee was fortunate enough to be seated alongside Pitt on a recent flight from Los Angeles to New York and he was able to capture the moment on his mobile phone.e has since posted the clip, showing Pitt tucking into his in-flight meal of chicken, enjoying a beer and catching some shut-eye, on brightcove.

“If Brad was any more down to earth, the jet never would have left the ground,” News.com.au quoted Lee as telling Star Magazine.

The New Yorker also enjoyed having a photo taken with the actor in the Los Angeles International Airport’s United Airlines first-class lounge. (ANI)

Pak Qaeda hand in 2006 trans-Atlantic bomb plot revealed

London, Sep.8 (ANI): New evidence put before a British jury during a retrial of three Brit Muslim convicts suggests that the men used code words to discuss their plans with an al-Qaeda fixer based in Pakistan.

The e-mails and conversations suggest that the plot was in its final stages, possibly days away from execution in 2006.

The seven daily flights highlighted by the three plotters were: 14.15 United Airlines Flight 931 to San Francisco; 15.00 Air Canada Flight 849 to Toronto; 15.15 Air Canada Flight 865 to Montreal; 15.40 United Airlines Flight 959 to Chicago; 16.20 United Airlines Flight 925 to Washington; 16.35 American Airlines Flight 131 to New York; 16.50 American Airlines Flight 91 to Chicago.

According to The Telegraph and the Daily Express, the batteries the gang planned to use as part of their detonators were bought in Pakistan.

An ingredient in the bomb mix was the orange soft drink Tang – sold in Pakistan – which had a high sugar content to aid the explosion.

A British intelligence source said: “The use of drink bottles sold in Pakistan and batteries sold in Pakistan underline the plot’s ties to that country. The foot soldiers were from Britain – but the organisers were in Pakistan.”

A security source said of the conspiracy: “It was very clever and the airport scanners would not have picked up the devices at all.”

Prosecutor Peter Wright told the Woolwich Crown Court in South East London how the would-be bombers were “a cell of home-grown terrorists activated and directed by a designated leader in Pakistan.”

That was confirmed by a government source in Pakistan, who said the plot was believed to have originated “with al-Qaeda in Afghanistan.”

Seized e-mails showed the chain of terror stretched from there, across the lawless border to Pakistan, to London and to the woods of High Wycombe where explosives were buried.

The aim was to mirror the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, which killed 259 passengers and 11 in the Scottish town.

Aliases exposed during the trial revealed the terror kingpin in Pakistan was dubbed “Paps” or “Papa”.

Ali called himself Imran and Chacha and also set up email accounts in the bogus names Tippu Khan and Jameel Masood.

His co-conspirators used aliases such as Fatty, Arro and Nigga.

Hydrogen peroxide was known as “aftershave”, police surveillance as “skin problems” and martyrdom videos were referred to as “wedding tapes”.

It is also thought that the bomb makers received training at an al-Qaeda camp in Pakistan.

A mystery Pakistani, thought to be a top al-Qaeda envoy, made contact with the three would-be suicide bombers during a flying visit to Britain in June 2006.

Experts who tested the explosive mix on the aircraft were horrified.

A witness said: “It was absolutely devastating.” (ANI)