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The airline topped the American Customer Satisfaction Index, despite its infamous panel blowout in January. Overall, US air travel customers were happier than last year with their experiences. The airline comfortably topped the annual American Customer Satisfaction Index with a score of 82, a one-point improvement compared to 2023. Allegiant registered a four-point rise in overall customer satisfaction, making it one of the fastest climbers this year. By collating this information, the American Customer Satisfaction Index says it provides a "definitive measure of passenger satisfaction."
Persons: , Allegiant, Max, Kyle Rinker, Jonathan W Organizations: Alaska Airlines, Service, American Airlines, Allegiant Air, Delta, United Airlines, Boeing, Portland International, Johnson, International Air Transport Association Locations: Alaska
The Justice Department is sending subpoenas and using a recently convened grand jury in Seattle as it widens a criminal investigation into the door plug that blew off a Boeing 737 Max 9 jetliner in January, a person familiar with the matter said on Friday. A preliminary report by the National Transportation Safety Board said four bolts meant to secure the door plug in place were missing before the panel blew off. This month, it was reported that the Justice Department had opened a criminal investigation of Boeing, which had reinstalled the door plug during maintenance in Renton, Wash., before delivering the plane to Alaska Airlines in October. The subpoenas and use of the grand jury were reported earlier Friday by Bloomberg. Boeing said it agreed with the F.A.A.’s decision and pledged to cooperate.
Persons: jetliner Organizations: Boeing, Max, Alaska Airlines, Portland International, National Transportation Safety, Justice Department, Bloomberg, Federal Aviation Administration Locations: Seattle, Oregon, Renton, Wash, Alaska
Three passengers are suing Alaska Airlines and Boeing for $1 billion. The law firm said the "preventable incident" jeopardized the lives of 180 people. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementThree people who were on board Alaska Airlines Flight 1282 are asking for $1 billion in punitive damages from the carrier and Boeing. This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers.
Persons: , Kyle Rinker, Amanda Strickland, Kevin Kwok, Jonathan W Organizations: Alaska Airlines, Boeing, Service, Alaska, Max, Johnson, Portland International, Business
2023 was the safest year for flying, IATA found. On average, you would have to fly every day for over 100,000 years to experience a fatal incident. AdvertisementLast year was the "best ever" for flying safety, the International Air Transport Association said. It found that on average, a person would have to fly every day for 103,239 years before experiencing a fatal incident. There was only one fatal incident in 2023, a crash involving a domestic flight in Nepal in which 68 passengers and four crew died, according to IATA.
Persons: , Nobody, Willie Walsh Organizations: Japan Airlines, Boeing, Service, International Air Transport Association, Japan Airlines Airbus, Airport, Coast Guard, Alaska Airlines, Max, Portland International Airport, National Transportation Safety Locations: Nepal, Tokyo
Airbus will learn lessons from the Boeing 737 Max blowout, said CEO Guillaume Faury. The Max 9 lost its door plug in midair after leaving the factory without key bolts, the NTSB said. AdvertisementAirbus is looking to learn lessons from Boeing's troubles following the Alaska Airlines blowout, its CEO said during a Thursday earnings call. "We're obviously, like many other players in the industry, observing the development after the door plug event," said CEO Guillaume Faury. In its preliminary report, the National Transportation Safety Board said the jet — delivered to the airline just 66 days earlier — left Boeing's factory missing key bolts designed to secure the door plug.
Persons: Guillaume Faury, Max, Faury, , it's Organizations: Airbus, Boeing, Max, NTSB, Service, Alaska Airlines, Portland International, National Transportation Safety, United Airlines, Bloomberg, United
Boeing is under heavy scrutiny following the Alaska Airlines door plug blowout earlier in January. AdvertisementBoeing suspended its financial forecast for 2024 as it reported its fourth-quarter earnings on Wednesday, amid scrutiny following the Alaska Airlines blowout. AdvertisementIn the earnings report, Boeing said it "continues to cooperate transparently with the FAA following the Alaska Airlines Flight 1282 accident." Last week, Alaska Airlines said it expects a $150 million hit due to the grounding. The FAA announced last Wednesday that it won't let Boeing expand production of the 737 Max.
Persons: Dave Calhoun, , Calhoun, Max, Nobody Organizations: Boeing, Alaska Airlines, Service, FAA, Portland International, Transportation Safety, Street Journal, Federal Aviation Administration, Airbus Locations: Alaska
Read previewOn January 5, an Alaska Airlines 737 Max 9 door plug broke off shortly after takeoff from Portland International Airport, leaving a gaping hole in the jet's fuselage. The Federal Aviation Administration quickly grounded 171 other Max 9 planes with the same door plug, mostly flown by United Airlines and Alaska. Four critical bolts used to secure the door plug were missing from the jet when it left Boeing's assembly line, The Wall Street Journal reported, representing a massive quality control lapse. Not all experts agree on the Max 9's safetyThe Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 9. AdvertisementAccording to the Washington Post, the travel booking website Kayak said its filter for the 737 Max significantly increased in the days after the incident.
Persons: , Max, Constance von Muehlen, Ingrid Barrentine, Mike Whitaker, Henry Harteveldt, Ed Pierson, I've, Joe Jacobsen, Harteveldt, Richard A, Brooks, Anthony Brickhouse, Brickhouse Organizations: Service, Alaska Airlines, Portland International Airport, Federal Aviation Administration, United Airlines, Street Journal, Business, CNN, FAA, Boeing, Spirit Airlines, Panama's Copa Airlines, Copa, Reuters, Atmosphere Research, Alaska Airlines Boeing, National Transportation, Alaska Max, Washington Post, LA Times, Southwest Airlines, Japan Airlines, Getty, Riddle Aeronautical University, Japan Airlines Airbus, NTSB Locations: Alaska, United , Alaska, United, AFP
Alaska Airlines N704AL, a 737 Max 9, which made an emergency landing at Portland International Airport on January 5 is parked at a maintenance hanger in Portland, Oregon on January 23, 2024. Alaska Airlines said Thursday that the weekslong grounding of the Boeing 737 Max 9 will cost the carrier $150 million. Both Alaska and United Airlines , the two U.S. carriers that have the Max 9s in their fleets, said they found loose bolts on several Max 9 planes during preliminary inspections shortly after the accident. Alaska on Thursday forecast full-year adjusted earnings per share of between $3 and $5, including the hit from the Max grounding. Alaska and United CEOs have expressed frustration and anger with Boeing this week after the accident.
Persons: Max, Ben Minicucci Organizations: Alaska Airlines, Portland International Airport, Boeing, Federal Aviation Administration, United Airlines, LSEG, Company, United, NBC Locations: Portland , Oregon, Alaska, United, U.S
Boeing hoped 2024 would be the year it would significantly increase production of its popular Max jets. Since then, details have emerged about the jet’s production at Boeing’s facility in Renton, Wash., that have intensified scrutiny of the company’s quality control. Boeing workers opened and then reinstalled the panel about a month before the plane was delivered to Alaska Airlines. The directive is another setback for Boeing, which had been planning to increase production of its Max plane series to more than 500 this year, from about 400 last year. It also planned to add another assembly line at a factory in Everett, Wash., a major Boeing production hub north of Seattle.
Persons: Max Organizations: Boeing, Federal Aviation Administration, Max, Alaska Airlines, Portland International Locations: Oregon, Renton, Wash, Everett, Seattle
Read previewThe Boeing 737 Max 9 will return to the skies on Friday, three weeks after the Alaska Airlines blowout, the carrier announced Wednesday. According to Reuters, United Airlines — the biggest operator of the Max 9 with 79 of them — said it will start flying the jet again from Sunday. "It makes me angry," Alaska Airlines CEO Ben Minicucci told NBC. Not all the Max 9 jets will immediately return to service because some haven't been through the full inspection process yet. Alaska Airlines expects all its inspections to be completed over the next week.
Persons: , Max, Ben Minicucci, Scott Kirby, Mike Whitaker Organizations: Service, Boeing, Alaska Airlines, Business, Reuters, United Airlines —, Federal Aviation Administration, Portland International, National Transportation Safety, NBC, CNBC, FAA Locations: Alaska
Alaska Airlines N704AL is seen grounded in a hangar at Portland International Airport in Portland, Oregon, on Jan. 9, 2024. The Federal Aviation Administration on Wednesday halted Boeing 's planned expansion of its 737 Max aircraft production, but it cleared a path for the manufacturer's Max 9 to return to service nearly three weeks after a door plug blew out during an Alaska Airlines flight. "Let me be clear: This won't be back to business as usual for Boeing," said FAA Administrator Mike Whitaker in a statement Wednesday. The grounding forced United Airlines and Alaska Airlines, the two U.S. airlines with the planes, to cancel hundreds of flights. The FAA is investigating Boeing's production lines after the Alaska flight.
Persons: Max, Mike Whitaker, Boeing didn't, Whitaker Organizations: Alaska Airlines, Portland International, Federal Aviation Administration, Wednesday, Boeing, Max, FAA, Airlines, United Airlines, United, CNBC, CNBC PRO Locations: Portland, Portland , Oregon, Alaska, Boeing's
Alaska Airlines N704AL, a 737 Max 9, which made an emergency landing at Portland International Airport on January 5 is parked at a maintenance hanger in Portland, Oregon on January 23, 2024. Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun met with several U.S. senators Wednesday on Capitol Hill as scrutiny on the company's leaders intensifies over a blown door plug on one of the company's 737 Max 9 planes. "I'm here today in the spirit of transparency ... [and to] answer all their questions, because they have a lot of them," Calhoun told reporters. Earlier Wednesday The Seattle Times reported that the fuselage panel that blew out during the Alaska Airlines flight, manufactured by Spirit AeroSystems , was removed for repair and then improperly reinstalled by Boeing's mechanics, not Spirit's. The stock is down more than 10% since the Jan. 5 Alaska Airlines incident.
Persons: Dave Calhoun, Calhoun, It's, Mike Whitaker, Sen, Dan Sullivan, Sullivan, Spirit AeroSystems, AeroSystems Organizations: Alaska Airlines, Portland International Airport, Boeing, Capitol, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, CNBC, Republican, Aviation, The Seattle Times, Spirit, U.S . National Transportation, Seattle Times, NTSB Locations: Portland , Oregon, Alaska, Calhoun
How Did a Boeing Jet End Up With a Big Hole? At about 16,000 feet, pilots heard a loud boom, and the pressure dropped further: One of those door plugs had completely torn off. National Transportation Safety BoardBoeing’s chief executive, Dave Calhoun, has suggested that a manufacturing lapse was responsible for the door plug blowing out. investigation, it’s clear to us we received an airplane from the manufacturer with a faulty door plug,” Alaska said in a statement. An older Boeing model, the 737-900ER, has the same design for its door plugs as the Max 9.
Persons: Bolts, New York Times Bolts, Jeff Simon, cotter, Simon, , it’s, ” Gary Peterson, Dave Calhoun, AeroSystems, Max, fuselages, Joe Buccino, Mr, Buccino, Mathieu Lewis, Rolland Organizations: Boeing, Alaska Airlines, New York Times, The New York Times, National Transportation, Federal Aviation Administration, Transport Workers Union of America, Transportation Safety, Alaska Airline, Transportation, CNBC, Spirit, Board, Portland International Airport Locations: Alaska, Portland ,, Malaysia, Wichita, Kan, Renton, Wash, Jan
The flight was canceled "to provide time for precautionary additional engineering maintenance checks," a Virgin Atlantic representative told Business Insider in a statement. AdvertisementThe missing bolts were not a safety concern, experts sayA Virgin Atlantic Airbus A330 flies over London in December 2022. "We'd like to apologize to our customers for the delay to their journeys," Virgin Atlantic told BI in a statement, and confirmed the plane is now back in service following an inspection. While not a safety issue, the recent Virgin Atlantic flight cancellation is not the first problem the airline has faced this year. On January 7, a Virgin Atlantic Airbus A330 traveling from Manchester to Barbados made an emergency landing after the smell of smoke filled the cockpit, The Independent reported.
Persons: , Phil Hardy, John F, Hardy, Robert Smith, Neil Firth, Mathieu Lewis, Rolland, Getty Organizations: Service, Kennedy, Virgin Atlantic, New York Post, Business, Airbus, Kennedy News Agency, The Independent, Virgin Atlantic Airbus, Getty, Boeing, Alaska Airlines, Alaska Airlines Boeing, Max, National Transportation Safety Board, An Alaska Airlines, Portland International Airport, US Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Independent Locations: Manchester, England, New York City, NYC, London, Portland , Oregon, Ontario , California, Barbados
"SNL" aired a parody ad for Alaska Airlines in its first show of the year, hosted by Jacob Elordi. Although the FAA has been more critical of Boeing's role in the blowout than Alaska Airlines. Advertisement"Saturday Night Live" aired a sketch this past weekend that parodied Alaska Airlines following the Flight 1282 incident where a Boeing 737 Max 9 lost its door plug in midair. AdvertisementThe door plug that came off the 737 Max 9 on January 5 covered a deactivated emergency exit which is only operational in configurations with more passengers. When the National Transportation Safety Board recovered the door plug in Oregon, they learned four bolts attaching it to the jet were missing.
Persons: Jacob Elordi, Captain Sully, , Nobody, Chesley, Sully, Sullenberger, Kenan Thompson, We're, Elordi, AeroSystems, Dave Calhoun Organizations: Alaska Airlines, FAA, Service, Boeing, Max, Portland International, National Transportation Safety Board, United Airlines, CNBC Locations: Alaska, Oregon
14 passengers filed a class-action lawsuit against Boeing and Alaska Airlines on Tuesday. The suit adds many struggled with their oxygen masks and one man had a stress-related seizure after landing. AdvertisementA class-action lawsuit filed against Boeing and Alaska Airlines on Tuesday details passengers' apparent injuries and says some oxygen masks malfunctioned on board Flight 1282. Anderson also had to switch oxygen masks because hers stopped working, the suit says. 171 Boeing 737 Max 9 jets remain grounded pending inspections.
Persons: , Max, Suzannah Anderson, Anderson, Iris Ruiz, Gwint Fisher Organizations: Boeing, Alaska Airlines, Service, Business, Max, Portland International, Federal Aviation Administration
Spirit is a Kansas-based company that builds the fuselages and other parts of Boeing planes, including the 737 Max 9. Spirit built the door plug which came off the 737 Max 9 on January 5, leaving a gaping hole in the fuselage. The National Transportation Safety Board is testing the recovered door plug to determine whether four missing bolts were ever installed. AdvertisementAlaska Airlines and United Airlines, the two biggest operators of the 737 Max 9, also found loose hardware on some of the grounded aircraft. 171 Boeing 737 Max 9 jets have been grounded by the FAA.
Persons: , Dave Calhoun, AeroSystems, Calhoun Organizations: Service, Federal Aviation Administration, Business, Boeing, Spirit, FAA, Alaska Airlines, Portland International, National Transportation Safety Board, United Airlines, Max Locations: Kansas
Alaska Airlines N704AL is seen grounded in a hangar at Portland International Airport on January 9, 2024 in Portland, Oregon. NTSB investigators are continuing their inspection on the Alaska Airlines N704AL Boeing 737 MAX 9 aircraft following a midair fuselage blowout on Friday, January 5. He and his team will have any and all support he needs from me and from across The Boeing Company," Calhoun said in a statement. The Federal Aviation Administration grounded Boeing 737 Max 9s earlier this month so the jets could undergo inspections after a door plug blew off Alaska Airlines Flight 1282 on January 5. Shares of Boeing fell about 8% Tuesday and are down almost 20% since the groundings began.
Persons: Kirkland Donald, Donald, Dave Calhoun, I've, Calhoun, Max Organizations: Alaska Airlines, Portland International Airport, NTSB, Alaska Airlines N704AL Boeing, Boeing, Boeing Company, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, U.S . Navy, Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program Locations: Portland, Portland , Oregon
Alaska Airlines said it met with Boeing's CEO last week and will review its quality control systems. AdvertisementAlaska Airlines announced Saturday that it is starting a "thorough review" of Boeing's quality control systems. The airline will also enhance its oversight of the Boeing production line by expanding its team that validates its quality. It added, "We welcome and appreciate" the Federal Aviation Administration's audit of the Boeing 737 Max 9 production line. Alaska Airlines and United Airlines, the world's biggest 737 Max 9 operator with 79, have canceled hundreds of flights as a result.
Persons: , AeroSystems, Dave Calhoun, Calhoun Organizations: Alaska Airlines, FAA, Max, Service, Boeing, Federal Aviation, Portland International, CNBC, United Airlines Locations: Alaska, Kansas
It is a feat former President Donald Trump is trying to duplicate this year. The first true test of Trump’s comeback occurs Monday in Iowa, where caucusgoers will venture into sub-zero temperatures to choose between Trump, Florida Gov. After months of speculation, we’ll finally get some answers to a few questions: Is there an opening for any Republican aside from Trump? Most of our contributors thought Haley won Wednesday’s CNN debate in Iowa against DeSantis, but Trump’s absence from the stage again loomed large. “Haley sounded like someone looking to take on the genuine article — the Republican frontrunner,” wrote W. James Antle III.
Persons: George Washington’s, Grover Cleveland, , Troy Senik, Donald Trump, Cleveland, , , Republican frontrunner’s, Cleveland didn’t, Benjamin Harrison —, Ron DeSantis, Nikki Haley, Vivek Ramaswamy, we’ll, Will DeSantis, he’s, Haley, Wednesday’s, “ Haley, James Antle III, , ” Clay Jones, Chris Christie, Trump, ” Antle, who’s, Facebook Sophia, Nelson, “ Haley isn’t, Todd Graham, she’d, it’s, ” DeSantis, John Avlon, Laurence Tribe, Norman Eisen, Taylor Redd, Florence Pan, John Sauer, ” Bill Bramhall, Frida Ghitis, Ghitis, DeSantis, Julian Zelizer, Dean Obeidallah, Nikki Haley’s Lisa Benson, Peter Bergen, Prince Mohammed Bin Salman, Biden, ” Walt Handelsman, Max, Drew Sheneman, Hassan Shahidi, Shahidi, Oprah, Oprah Winfrey, John Salangsang, Adrienne Bitar, WeightWatchers, couldn’t, Rose Blanchard, Sarah Gundle, Blanchard, Claudine ‘ Dee Dee ’ Blanchard, Gypsy Rose, ” Dee Dee, Gundle, Dee Dee Blanchard, Pope Francis, ” Jill Filipovic, Filipovic, Pope, ” Lloyd Austin’s, Lloyd Austin, Joe Biden, Austin, isn’t, Bill Bramhall, “ Oppenheimer, “ Barbie, “ Barbie ”, Gene Seymour, Oppenheimer, Emma Stone, ” Seymour, Don’t, Michael Bociurkiw, Ukraine Lanhee J, Chen, Noah Berlatsky, Belichick Bill Belichick, Vince Lombardi, Jeff Haynes, Bill Belichick, Will Leitch, Jeff Pearlman, Nick Saban, ” “ Belichick, Saban, ’ Pearlman, Lou Piniella, Organizations: CNN, University of Michigan, Cleveland, Republican, Trump, Trump , Florida Gov, Wednesday’s CNN, DeSantis, New, New Jersey Gov, Twitter, Facebook, Florida Gov, DC, Agency, Capitol, GOP, US, UK, Alaska Airlines, Boeing, Max, Portland International, Flight, Foundation, Golden Globe, Globes, Catholic, Biden, Warner Bros ., Academy, Hollywood Foreign Press Association, Belichick, New England Patriots, Reliant, Patriots, Carolina Panthers, Getty, Super, Football, NFL, Minor League NFL, University of Alabama, Schlitz, Seattle Mariners Locations: Cleveland, Iowa, Trump , Florida, Trump, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Graham, Houthi, Yemen, Red, , Saudi Arabia, Saudi, Bergen, Iran, Iraq, Iranian, Oregon, Beverly Hills , California, Ukraine, Houston , Texas, AFP, Swiss
Read previewAn Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 Max 9 had 177 people on board on January 5 when part of the fuselage was blown off. After the Federal Aviation Administration grounded all 737 Max 9 planes with door plugs, United Airlines and Alaska Airlines discovered loose hardware on several. Why the 737 Max was grounded in 2019Competition between Airbus and Boeing played a role in the twin 737 Max crashes that killed almost 350 people in 2018 and 2019. The Alaska Airlines blowout will likely renew scrutiny of Boeing's deal with the department, which demanded new compliance procedures. A Boeing 737 Max 10 at the Paris Air Show.
Persons: , Max, It's, Michael O'Leary, Tim Clark, Dennis, Win McNamee, Bob Clifford, people's, could've, Clifford, David P, Burns, AeroSystems, McDonnell Douglas, MBAs, Harry Stonecipher, Stonecipher, PIERRE VERDY, Dave Calhoun, who's Organizations: Service, Alaska Airlines Boeing, Max, Portland International, Business, Federal Aviation Administration, United Airlines, Alaska Airlines, FAA, Boeing, National Transportation Safety, NTSB, Reuters, Airbus, Ryanair, Financial, Emirates, Bloomberg, New York Times, Lion Air, Ethiopian Airlines, Ethiopian, Pilots, MCAS, The Justice Department, McDonnell, Seattle Times, Paris Air, Getty, CNBC Locations: Kansas, Alaska
Emma Degerstedt took to TikTok to share her wedding flight got axed last minute. She was slated to fly on a Boeing 737 Max 9, the plane model that lost its door mid-air last week. But a day before Degerstedt and her fiancé were scheduled to fly from Newark, New Jersey, to Fort Lauderdale, Florida, for their wedding, Degerstedt discovered their United flight was canceled. "We were emotionally prepared for this moment, but we just thought it might be a delayed flight due to weather," Degerstedt told BI. He booked the pair on the last two seats of an American Airlines flight heading to Florida at 6:30 a.m. on Wednesday.
Persons: Emma Degerstedt, TikTok, , Degerstedt, Max, jetliner, Degerstedt's fiancé, @officialemmadegs, ault, ike, ain Organizations: Boeing, Service, Max, FAA, Alaska Airlines, @United, Reuters, United, . United Airlines, National Transportation Safety Board, Portland International Airport, National Transportation, American Airlines, eads Locations: Newark , New Jersey, Fort Lauderdale , Florida, Alaska, Portland , Ore, Portland, Florida, Newark, nabbing, We'll, ideos
CNN —A class action lawsuit was filed on Thursday in Washington state against Boeing on behalf of the passengers aboard last week’s Alaska Airlines flight 1282. According to the lawsuit’s allegations, “the event physically injured some passengers and emotionally traumatized most if not all aboard. “Boeing is responsible for the safety of design and maintenance instructions as well as continuing airworthiness of the aircraft,” the lawsuit said. Some of the plaintiffs listed in the lawsuit cited various injuries they allegedly suffered as a result of the incident including “difficulty breathing,” “causing a concussion” and a loss of hearing. The lawsuit is requesting a trial to determine the damage amounts.
Organizations: CNN, Boeing, Alaska Airlines, Portland International Airport Locations: Washington, Portland, Ontario , California
Emerson told investigators he “had consumed ‘magic mushrooms’ approximately 48 hours prior to the incident on the plane,” an affidavit filed by prosecutors states. Off-duty pilot Joseph D. Emerson was accused of trying to shut off a plane's engines mid-flight. “The officer and Emerson talked about the use of psychedelic mushrooms and Emerson said it was his first-time taking mushrooms,” the affidavit says. Authorities do not believe the incident was an act of terrorism or ideologically motivated violence, a law enforcement source familiar with the investigation told CNN. ‘It was very shocking,’ suspect’s neighbor saysEmerson’s neighbor, Ed Yee, told CNN it was “very shocking” to hear of the suspect’s alleged actions.
Persons: Joseph D, Emerson, , “ Emerson, ” Emerson, It’s, Matt Johnson, Johns Hopkins, Johnson, Derealization, Joseph Emerson, “ I’m, , Jenna Plank, Emerson “, LiveATC.net, , , Aubrey Gavello, ” Gavello, “ Laura Coates, Alex Wood, Wood, ” Wood, Ed Yee, ” Yee Organizations: CNN, Alaska Airlines, Sunday, US, Office, District of Oregon, Facebook, Portland police, Investigators, Everett , Washington , Alaska Airlines, Horizon, Embraer, Portland International Airport, FBI Locations: Washington, San Francisco, Oregon, Portland , Oregon, Port, Portland, Multnomah, Everett , Washington , Alaska
In this article ALK Follow your favorite stocks CREATE FREE ACCOUNTAn Alaska Airlines jet departs John Wayne Airport in Santa Ana, CA on Monday, August 8, 2022. Medianews Group/orange County Register Via Getty Images | Medianews Group | Getty Images"I am not okay," an off-duty Alaska Airlines pilot said before allegedly reaching and grabbing handles that could have disabled the aircraft's engines, according to a federal complaint filed on Tuesday. The pilots told investigators that there was no indication of anything wrong early in the flight, according to court records. One of the flight's pilots told investigators that Emerson settled down after about 20 to 30 seconds and exited the cockpit. After leaving the cockpit, Emerson told a flight attendant, "You need to cuff me right now or it's going to be bad."
Persons: Joseph David Emerson, Emerson Organizations: Alaska Airlines, John Wayne Airport, Medianews, Getty, Alaska, Portland International Airport, Justice Department, Multnomah County Sheriff's, Pilots Locations: Santa Ana , CA, San Francisco, Portland, Pleasant Hill , California, Oregon, Multnomah County
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