Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

WestJet Flight Makes Unscheduled Landing Due To Unruly, Drunk Passenger

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Oct, 2017 11:24 AM
    FORT MCMURRAY, Alta. — RCMP in the northern Alberta detachment of Wood Buffalo say a WestJet flight made an unscheduled landing in Fort McMurray earlier this week due to an unruly drunk.
     
    Cpl. Teri-Ann Deobald says in a news release that flight 3177 on Monday was supposed to fly from Calgary to Yellowknife.
     
    But she says it instead landed in Fort McMurray, where Mounties arrested an intoxicated male passenger who was held in custody until sober.
     
    The flight then carried on safely to its scheduled destination.
     
    Deobald describes it as an isolated incident and did not say if there would be charges.
     
    Transport Canada is investigating.
     
    A passenger on the flight, Bray Mernickle, posted about the incident on his Facebook page during the brief stop in Fort McMurray.
     
    "Drunk guy assaulted a woman, threw his phone at the flight attendant, and kept screaming about the prime minister and how we're all going to hell," Mernickle wrote.
     
    "Me and a fellow passenger had to help restrain him and move him to the back where they used restraints on him, even a guy beside him to keep him from doing any more harm to anyone.
     
    "To add to the madness, two other passengers who were drinking and being belligerent asked to be quiet or get off as well."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    RCMP say they called off pursuit before crash that killed three women

    RCMP say they called off pursuit before crash that killed three women
    Mounties say they were chasing a stolen truck that crashed into a minivan and killed three Edmonton women, but add they called off the pursuit long before the deadly collision.

    RCMP say they called off pursuit before crash that killed three women

    New model confirms endangered right whales are declining

    New model confirms endangered right whales are declining
    Researchers with the U.S. government and the New England Aquarium have developed a new model they said will provide better estimates about the North Atlantic right whale population, and the news isn't good.

    New model confirms endangered right whales are declining

    B.C. man acquitted of four terrorism charges related to Facebook posts

    B.C. man acquitted of four terrorism charges related to Facebook posts
    A British Columbia man accused of using his Facebook account to express support of "lone wolf" terrorist attacks has been acquitted of all charges.

    B.C. man acquitted of four terrorism charges related to Facebook posts

    B.C. government invites public to share views on marijuana rules

    B.C. government invites public to share views on marijuana rules
    A Vancouver councillor says it may take years, but he can see the day a craft cannabis industry emerges in British Columbia, with smoking lounges in the city allowing people to responsibly sample strains of specially cultivated marijuana.

    B.C. government invites public to share views on marijuana rules

    Legal cannabis tops packed agenda at annual meeting of B.C.'s municipal leaders

    Legal cannabis tops packed agenda at annual meeting of B.C.'s municipal leaders
    Municipalities in British Columbia are clamouring to have a say in the marijuana policies they believe will fall largely on their shoulders to enforce when pot becomes legal next summer.

    Legal cannabis tops packed agenda at annual meeting of B.C.'s municipal leaders

    Former B.C. finance minister Mike de Jong enters Liberal leadership race

    Former B.C. finance minister Mike de Jong enters Liberal leadership race
    British Columbia's former finance minister Mike de Jong has announced his bid for the provincial Liberal leadership, joining a race that already includes two other past cabinet ministers and the former mayors of B.C.'s two largest cities.

    Former B.C. finance minister Mike de Jong enters Liberal leadership race