A Turkish man pleaded has guilty to interfering with a flight crew and blamed his inflight behavior that prompted fighter jets to escort the plane to its Honolulu destination on hallucinating that he was chasing a butterfly.
A butterfly suddenly came out of the front pocket of the seat in front of him, Anil Uskanli said in a Honolulu federal court Tuesday in describing what he did during the May 19 American Airlines flight from Los Angeles. "The butterfly went crazy ... flew into the toilet," he said. "I followed it. I tried to kill it by punching it."
Uskanli, 25, said he now realizes that he was ill and hallucinating.
More From This Section
After Uskanli returned to his seat and with an off-duty officer sitting with him, the laptop remained on a drink cart, which prompted the captain to initiate bomb-threat procedures, Brady said.
The Hawaii National Guard scrambled two fighter jets to escort the plane to Honolulu. The secretary of Homeland Security was briefed.
Uskanli raised other red flags while still at Los Angeles International Airport, but experts said a lack of communication and an airline's hesitancy to be caught on video booting a passenger played a role in allowing him to fly.
In April, a United Airlines incident in which a passenger was dragged off an overcrowded plane drew widespread attention.
Uskanli had purchased a ticket at an airline counter in the middle of the night with no luggage and was arrested ahead of the flight to Hawaii after opening a door to a restricted airfield. Airport police said he smelled of alcohol but was not intoxicated enough to be charged with public drunkenness, so he was given a citation and released.
After the flight landed in Honolulu and Uskanli was arrested, a judge ordered a mental competency evaluation at the request of his defense attorney. He was sent to a federal detention facility in Los Angeles to undergo the evaluation.
When Uskanli returned to Honolulu, defense attorney Richard Sing tried to have a hearing on his mental competency and detention closed to the public. US Magistrate Judge Kenneth Mansfield initially granted the request.
The Associated Press, Honolulu Star-Advertiser and other media objected, urging the judge not to limit the public's right to court access without following proper procedures.
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)