Tuesday, June 30, 2026
ADVT 
National

Passengers Help Subdue Unruly Man On Westjet Flight Headed To Edmonton

The Canadian Press, 01 Sep, 2016 11:00 AM
  • Passengers Help Subdue Unruly Man On Westjet Flight Headed To Edmonton
EDMONTON — A customer on a WestJet flight from Toronto to Edmonton says there were some tense moments as he and others helped the crew subdue an unruly passenger.
 
Steven Kelley says he was sitting four rows back from the cockpit of the Boeing 737 when a man wearing a backpack twice walked from the back of the plane to the front during the last half of the four-hour flight.
 
Kelly says the man approached the flight attendant each time and asked to get off the plane while it was still in the air.
 
RCMP said Wednesday that a 20-year-old man was arrested after causing a disturbance on a flight.
 
The individual was taken into custody without incident once the plane landed.
 
Police are investigating but so far no charges have been laid.
 
“When he came up the second time, I knew right away that there was something, that something was going to happen,” Kelly said.
 
He said the flight attendant asked for help so he and some other passengers stepped in and helped restrain the passenger.
 
“Jumped up, grabbed the guy, basically got control of one arm and maybe his neck," recalled Kelly. "We ziptied him, and they brought him to the back of the plane where they held him for about a half hour or so until we landed."
 
According to Kelly, another passenger said the man had spent the first three hours of the flight praying, but it wasn’t clear exactly what his motivation was. He also said "it was weird" the man was wearing a backpack three hours into the flight.
 
“The entire time he was calling us ‘non-believers’ and saying if there were any believers on board, to kill him,” Kelly said.
 
“I don’t honestly know if he was trying to open the door, he definitely was moving towards the door, he was only a few feet away from it.”
 
WestJet declined comment except to confirm an incident took place on board a flight “involving an unruly individual who was removed by RCMP at the request of the crew.”
 
Earlier this week there was an incident on an Alaska Airlines flight where an agitated passenger tried to open a rear door during the flight. The plane, which was en route from New York City to Seattle, was diverted to Minneapolis.

MORE National ARTICLES

Ontario Mother Died Trying To Save Son From Hurting Himself: Husband

Ontario Mother Died Trying To Save Son From Hurting Himself: Husband
An Ontario man who lost his wife and son to a murder-suicide last week says his wife died trying to stop their son from harming himself.

Ontario Mother Died Trying To Save Son From Hurting Himself: Husband

Vancouver Vaisakhi Parade Goes Green for 2016

Vancouver Vaisakhi Parade Goes Green for 2016
Khalsa Diwan Society and Vancity Credit Union help to make 2016 Parade the greenest in Vancouver’s history

Vancouver Vaisakhi Parade Goes Green for 2016

B.C. Forms Investigation Team To Tackle Money Laundering, Illegal Gaming

Finance Minister Mike de Jong says 22 officers with the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit will now be dedicated to investigating groups that use gaming facilites to legalize the proceeds of crime.

B.C. Forms Investigation Team To Tackle Money Laundering, Illegal Gaming

Province Urging British Columbians To Create Legal Wills

Province Urging British Columbians To Create Legal Wills
The province has proclaimed April 10 to 16 Make a Will Week in an effort to get more people to make legal wills.

Province Urging British Columbians To Create Legal Wills

B.C.'s Beetle-Gnawed, Carbon Spewing Forests Recovering Quickly Says Researcher

B.C.'s Beetle-Gnawed, Carbon Spewing Forests Recovering Quickly Says Researcher
The research from the U-Vic-led Pacific Institute for Climate Solutions says global warming is making B.C. forests grow faster and the trees are taking in more carbon dioxide, the gas associated with the globe's steadily climbing temperatures.

B.C.'s Beetle-Gnawed, Carbon Spewing Forests Recovering Quickly Says Researcher

No Fooling Around: Burnaby Scientists Use Sex, Food, Sound To Lure Rats In Superior Trap

No Fooling Around: Burnaby Scientists Use Sex, Food, Sound To Lure Rats In Superior Trap
A team at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, B.C., has developed a rat trap that combines synthetic sex pheromones, food scents and baby rat sounds to lure rodents to their deaths.

No Fooling Around: Burnaby Scientists Use Sex, Food, Sound To Lure Rats In Superior Trap