Fighters escort Hawaiian flight

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SOURCE: Honolulu Star-Bulletin
http://starbulletin.com/2002/02/19/news/index5.html

Fighters escort Hawaiian jetliner

Air Force jets hustle when a bomb is reported on a Seattle flight, but
the plane lands safely

Star-Bulletin staff and news services

SEATTLE >> Two fighter jets escorted a Hawaiian Airlines passenger jet
arriving in Seattle from Honolulu yesterday after a bomb threat was
received against the plane. Hawaiian Airlines officials said no bomb was
found after the flight crew did a visual search while the plane was
still in the air.

Port of Seattle police were also unable to find any trace of a bomb
after they boarded the DC-10 last night with bomb-sniffing dogs, said
airport spokesman Bob Parker.

Seattle police received a call on the 911 phone line at 7:50 p.m. saying
there was a bomb on Hawaiian Airlines Flight 22, a duty officer for the
Federal Aviation Administration said.

The U.S. Air Force sent fighter jets to escort the plane into Seattle,
the duty officer said. The jets scrambled from McChord Air Force Base in
Tacoma and later returned to base, according to KIRO-TV.

The plane touched down without incident at 9:24 p.m. Hawaiian Airlines
spokesman Keoni Wagner said all 304 passengers were for the most part
unaffected by the hoax. To his knowledge, Wagner said, this was the
first time that fighter jets escorted a Hawaiian aircraft for any reason.

Earlier yesterday, an Army National Guardsman arriving from Honolulu was
arrested at Los Angeles International Airport after trying to pass a
security checkpoint with an explosive device in his bag, authorities
said. No evacuations were ordered and no flights were delayed.

Jacques Baker, 32, of Guam, was taken into custody for carrying an
explosive device aboard an aircraft, said FBI spokesman Matthew
McLaughlin. Baker was expected to be charged today in federal court,
McLaughlin said.

Baker flew alone into Los Angeles early yesterday from Honolulu and was
bound for Sacramento when the device was found in his luggage.

A security screener noticed the device in Baker's carry-on bag as it
passed through an X-ray machine. Authorities said it was unclear whether
Baker was on active duty or on leave. McLaughlin identified the device
as a seal bomb, typically used by fishermen to scare seals away from
fishing areas.

--
David Mueller / SAN
kawika42@mac.com
http://www.quanterium.com

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