Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Air Canada Plane Diverted After Ontario Man Allegedly Tries To Open Door

The Canadian Press, 17 May, 2017 12:49 PM
    TORONTO — An Ontario man is in federal custody in the United States after allegedly assaulting members of an Air Canada flight crew and trying to open the door of a plane while it was in flight.
     
    Court documents show Brandon Michael Courneyea was arrested on Monday after his flight from Montego Bay, Jamaica, to Toronto had to be diverted because of a disturbance on board.
     
    The documents allege Courneyea yelled at fellow passengers for looking at him, swung pots full of hot coffee at flight attendants and eventually tried to open the door of the aircraft mid-flight after saying "it would only take one guy to take the plane down."
     
    The flight was ultimately diverted to Orlando, Fla., where Courneyea was arrested and taken into custody by the FBI.
     
    A criminal complaint against him says he was arrested under a charge of assault or intimidation of a flight crew member and interfering with their job duties, an allegation that has not yet been proven in court.
     
    Courneyea's wife says his arrest has come as a complete shock, saying his alleged behaviour is not in keeping with the man she knows.
     
    "That is not my husband at all," she told The Canadian Press in a telephone interview. "There's a lot more to what brought that on, because my husband is the kindest, most loving man you'll ever meet. And anybody that knows him will tell you the same thing."
     
    Amanda Courneyea said her 33-year-old husband headed off to Jamaica last week from his home in Amherstview, Ont., to fulfil a long-held desire to take a vacation there.
     
    She said she had urged him to "cross it off his bucket list," adding he travelled alone because the couple has five children, many of whom have special needs, and cannot be left in the care of a babysitter.
     
    But Brandon Courneyea's vacation plans went awry almost immediately, according to his wife, who said he told her that locals were threatening his life.
     
     
    She arranged for him to move up his flight plans from Friday to Monday, booking him on an Air Canada flight to Toronto that left Montego Bay in the late afternoon.
     
    According to the criminal complaint filed against Courneyea, disruptions began almost as soon as the flight was in the air.
     
    A flight attendant told an FBI investigator that she first heard signs of a "verbal disturbance" shortly after takeoff, though Courneyea soon settled down.
     
    He came to the crew's attention again, however, when he allegedly began yelling at passengers for "looking at him" and threw a wad of paper at a woman sitting nearby, the complaint said.
     
    Crew members asked Courneyea to move to the back of the plane, but Courneyea allegedly walked erratically through the aircraft, at one point without shoes on.
     
    Eventually, the criminal complaint states, Courneyea entered the back of the plane, picked up a full coffee pot and began swinging it at a flight attendant.
     
    "A fellow passenger attempted to calm Courneyea however, these attempts were futile," reads the criminal complaint. "Courneyea then stated that it would only take one guy to take the plane down and that he wanted to take everyone with him."
     
    After grabbing another full coffee pot, Courneyea allegedly dove for the back exit and tried to pull up a lever to open the door.
     
    The complaint said both crew and passengers jumped in to restrain Courneyea and eventually bound his arms and legs to a seat using zip ties.
     
    Air Canada spokeswoman Isabelle Arthur said Courneyea's efforts to open a door mid-flight would not have succeeded, saying it's "impossible to do during flight."
     
    She said crew followed standard procedures for dealing with unruly passengers, adding the airline would not offer further comment as the incident is now a police matter.
     
    Amanda Courneyea said she has not been allowed to speak to her husband since his arrest, adding his absence is taking a toll on her and her family.
     
    "My kids are heart-broken and crying, and I'm crying, and we just want him home where he belongs," she said.
     
    Amy Filjones, spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney's Office in Florida, said Brandon Courneyea must come before a judge to be indicted on a criminal charge, adding that has not yet taken place. She would not comment on whether Courneyea would be released.
     
    Global Affairs Canada did not immediately respond to request for comment.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Elections BC Gets Recount Request From Liberal Candidate Jim Benninger Who Lost By Nine Votes

    Elections BC Gets Recount Request From Liberal Candidate Jim Benninger Who Lost By Nine Votes
      VANCOUVER — Elections BC says the Liberal candidate in the Courtenay-Comox riding on Vancouver Island has requested a recount after losing to the NDP candidate by nine votes in Tuesday's provincial election.

    Elections BC Gets Recount Request From Liberal Candidate Jim Benninger Who Lost By Nine Votes

    'Whole Body Was Smoking:' Kids Throw Dog Into Firepit In Manitoba Community

    'Whole Body Was Smoking:' Kids Throw Dog Into Firepit In Manitoba Community
    WINNIPEG — A dog has severe burns over its body after being thrown into a firepit in a community in northern Manitoba.

    'Whole Body Was Smoking:' Kids Throw Dog Into Firepit In Manitoba Community

    N.B. Wryly Roasts Ottawa For Erroneously Placing Famous Rock Formation In N.S.

    N.B. Wryly Roasts Ottawa For Erroneously Placing Famous Rock Formation In N.S.
    FREDERICTON — New Brunswick had to give Ottawa a geography lesson — Twitter-style — after a federal agency mistakenly put the famous Hopewell Rocks in Nova Scotia.

    N.B. Wryly Roasts Ottawa For Erroneously Placing Famous Rock Formation In N.S.

    Flooding Expected To Be 'Unlike Anything Ever Seen' Warns Kelowna Mayor

    Flooding Expected To Be 'Unlike Anything Ever Seen' Warns Kelowna Mayor
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's Okanagan region is bracing for a storm that Kelowna's mayor worries could unleash the worst flooding the region has ever seen.

    Flooding Expected To Be 'Unlike Anything Ever Seen' Warns Kelowna Mayor

    B.C. Political Parties Ponder Common Issues After Close Vote, Possible Deals

    B.C. Political Parties Ponder Common Issues After Close Vote, Possible Deals
    With more than 176,000 absentee ballots still to be counted by Elections BC, final totals are due by May 24.

    B.C. Political Parties Ponder Common Issues After Close Vote, Possible Deals

    Barack Obama To Deliver Keynote Speech To Montreal Board Of Trade In June

    MONTREAL — Former U.S. president Barack Obama will deliver a keynote speech to the Montreal Board of Trade on June 6, the organization announced Wednesday.

    Barack Obama To Deliver Keynote Speech To Montreal Board Of Trade In June