NYTimes.com Article: What Really Happened on Flight 327?

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



The article below from NYTimes.com
has been sent to you by psa188@xxxxxxxxx



/--------- E-mail Sponsored by Fox Searchlight ------------\

THE CLEARING - NOW PLAYING IN SELECT CITIES

THE CLEARING stars ROBERT REDFORD and HELEN MIRREN as Wayne
and Eileen Hayes - a husband and wife living the American
Dream. Together they've raised two children and struggled to
build a successful business from the ground up. When Wayne
is kidnapped by Arnold Mack (WILLEM DAFOE), and held for
ransom in a remote forest, the couple's world is turned
inside out.

Buy tickets now at:
http://movies.channel.aol.com/movie/main.adp?mid=17891

\----------------------------------------------------------/


What Really Happened on Flight 327?

July 20, 2004
 By JOE SHARKEY





There is no doubt that something out of the ordinary
happened on Northwest Airlines Flight 327 from Detroit to
Los Angeles on June 29. The plane was met at the airport by
squads of federal agents and police responding to radio
messages from the pilots about concerns that 14 Middle
Eastern male passengers had spent the four-hour flight
acting suspiciously.

But was the episode a dry run for a terrorist attack, as is
now being widely suggested on the Internet and on talk
radio, or an aborted terrorist attack? Or was it an
innocent sequence of events that some passengers, overcome
by anxiety and perhaps ethnic stereotyping, misinterpreted
as a plot to blow up their plane?

The story of Flight 327 was first told in a 3,300-word
online article, "Terror in the Skies, Again?" by Annie
Jacobsen, a 37-year-old freelance writer from Los Angeles.
Ms. Jacobsen's report was published last Tuesday on a Web
site for women, www.womenswallstreet.com. It is compelling
reading.

I have since spoken at length with Ms. Jacobsen, and also
with an official of the Federal Air Marshal Service, who
confirmed the gist of Ms. Jacobsen's narrative, if not her
interpretation.

On June 29, Ms. Jacobsen; her husband, Kevin; and their
41/2-year-old son were returning home from a family visit
in Rhode Island when they boarded a connecting flight in
Detroit, Northwest 327. While boarding, both she and her
husband became aware of a group of six men of Middle
Eastern appearance who followed them on board. One wore a
large orthopedic shoe. Two carried what appeared to be
small musical instrument cases. One wore a yellow T-shirt
and was carrying a big McDonald's sack.

As the Jacobsens settled into their seats, they watched a
second group of Middle Eastern men board. These men were in
communication with the first group "absolutely from the
get-go," Ms. Jacobsen said. Furthermore, she said, "they
all seemed to be checking in with the guy in the yellow
shirt," who was sitting across the aisle from her.

Mr. Jacobsen, 38, who is the president of an
import-and-design company as well as an actor in television
commercials, was already feeling uneasy. "When I first got
on the flight, my instincts said that something was
wrong,'' he recalled. "I did turn to my wife and say, 'We
must get off this flight.' " He didn't follow through on
that, however, because he didn't want to create a commotion
based on a whim, he said.

In great detail, Ms. Jacobsen's article describes the
"unusual activity" the men engaged in during the flight.
Other passengers and the flight attendants became alerted
to it, also. Ignoring the "fasten seat belt'' signs, the
men went frequently and in succession to the lavatories,
and congregated near the galleys in pairs or threesomes.
The man in the yellow shirt gave her a "cold, defiant look"
when she caught his eye, she said.

About two hours into the flight, with tension building, her
husband decided to approach a flight attendant with his
suspicions. The flight attendant said the crew were already
aware of the odd behavior, including the fact that parcels
like the McDonald's bag were carried into the lavatories.

"She said I was 'right on schedule' with what I was feeling
was happening, that she was aware of it, that they were
passing notes to each other, that the pilots were aware of
it, and that there were people on board who are 'higher up
than you or me' that were watching them," Mr. Jacobsen
said. He presumed, correctly, that this was a reference to
undercover federal air marshals.

Later, as the plane was in its final approach to Los
Angeles, at the stage of a flight when even the flight
attendants are strapped into their seats, "suddenly, seven
of the men stood up in unison," Ms. Jacobsen said. Some
walked toward the back lavatories and some toward the
front. Two stood by the aircraft door. The flight
attendants remained silent, she said.

"I don't have any words to explain how terrified I was" at
that point, said Mr. Jacobsen, who added that he clutched a
pen in his hand to use as a weapon, while thinking: "I hope
I'm not the only one who will react. I hope I don't choke
and get scared."

Then the plane landed without a problem. Waiting at the
door were officers from the Federal Air Marshal Service,
the F.B.I., the T.S.A. and the Los Angeles Police
Department. The 14 men were questioned at length and
released. The Jacobsens also were questioned for over an
hour.

Yesterday, a Federal Air Marshal Service spokesman, Dave
Adams, a law enforcement officer for 30 years, said that
the suspicious characters on Flight 327 were musicians. The
man in the yellow shirt was a drummer, he said.

"We interviewed all 14 of these individuals,'' Mr. Adams
said. "They were members of a Syrian band" traveling to a
gig at a casino near Los Angeles, he said, adding that
their names were run through "every possible" data bank and
terrorist watch list. "They were scrubbed. Nothing came
back."

Mr. Adams said he spoke by phone to Ms. Jacobsen for 90
minutes on Friday night. "This is an individual's
perceptions," he said of her account of the flight.
"Obviously, since 9/11, everybody's antennas have risen,
and people are very concerned when they see something like
this." He said that onboard air marshals did not intervene
because the men weren't "interfering with the flight crew."


Even so, he said, he had no doubt that "most of the stuff
did happen" as Ms. Jacobsen described it.

Aware of recent reports that the F.B.I. is worried that
teams of terrorists may be practicing ways to sneak
explosive device parts onto planes and assemble them in
flight, Mr. Adams said, air marshals aboard Flight 327
"checked out the lavatories, and nothing looked like it was
in disarray after these people went inside; everything was
thoroughly inspected."

Ms. Jacobsen isn't convinced. No one has disputed any of
her facts, she said, and in an article that she posted on
the Web site yesterday, she asked why the Syrian band
hadn't been identified. (I couldn't locate them, by the
way). She wrote of receiving numerous e-mail messages from
airline crew members, several of whom said they believed
that terrorist-team dry runs had happened on flights. She
said that "political correctness" had become a "major
roadblock for airline safety."

I asked her about the inevitable charge that ethnic
stereotyping was driving her narrative. "I am simply not a
racist," she said. "I travel everywhere. I was just in
India, working in a Muslim village. I'm not afraid of any
culture. This situation was entirely different. I have
never been so terrified."

Imad Hamad, the regional director of the Michigan office of
the American Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, said that
he knew nothing more about this incident than what Ms.
Jacobsen had reported. "I think this level of high anxiety
has been implanted in our hearts and minds, and even those
who are good people with good intensions cannot help but to
look at things in a very suspicious way," he said. "We've
got to be vigilant as citizens, but we also have to be
calm."

As for the Syrian band, "They gave their little performance
in the casino and two days later they flew out on a JetBlue
flight from Long Beach to New York," Mr. Adams said.

On the Road appears each Tuesday. E-mail:
jsharkey@xxxxxxxxxxxx

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/07/20/business/20road.html?ex=1091328370&ei=1&en=92f1ab5e516237d4


---------------------------------

Get Home Delivery of The New York Times Newspaper. Imagine
reading The New York Times any time & anywhere you like!
Leisurely catch up on events & expand your horizons. Enjoy
now for 50% off Home Delivery! Click here:

http://homedelivery.nytimes.com/HDS/SubscriptionT1.do?mode=SubscriptionT1&ExternalMediaCode=W24AF



HOW TO ADVERTISE
---------------------------------
For information on advertising in e-mail newsletters
or other creative advertising opportunities with The
New York Times on the Web, please contact
onlinesales@xxxxxxxxxxx or visit our online media
kit at http://www.nytimes.com/adinfo

For general information about NYTimes.com, write to
help@xxxxxxxxxxxx

Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company

[Index of Archives]         [NTSB]     [NASA KSC]     [Yosemite]     [Steve's Art]     [Deep Creek Hot Springs]     [NTSB]     [STB]     [Share Photos]     [Yosemite Campsites]