© 2024 Blaze Media LLC. All rights reserved.
Philadelphia: US Airways Flight Evacuated Over Threatening Note Found On Board

Philadelphia: US Airways Flight Evacuated Over Threatening Note Found On Board

No explosives were found.

PHILADELPHIA (The Blaze/AP) -- Passengers aboard a US Airways flight that arrived Friday from Scotland were removed from the plane because of a threatening note, and the plane was taken to another part of Philadelphia International Airport to be inspected.

The 157 passengers and six crew members had boarded the Anchorage, Alaska-bound Flight 968 when they were asked by Transportation Security Administration officials to deplane so it could be swept by law enforcement officials, Tempe, Ariz.-based US Airways Inc. spokesman Andrew Christie told The Associated Press. The plane had arrived earlier from Glasgow.

The TSA said in a statement that the investigation was launched because of a threatening note, but it didn't provide details about it. Airport spokeswoman Victoria Lupica said she didn't know what the threat was, but she said the incident was referred to the FBI.

The passengers were taken inside Terminal A, one of the airport's seven terminals. Across the tarmac, baggage handlers unloaded the Boeing 757.

Outside the plane, an explosive ordnance removal technician was seen X-raying a suitcase. Later, a police officer took the suitcase and dumped its contents onto the ground.

Other items aboard the plane, which also was carrying commercial cargo, were being examined, too.

Passengers inside the terminal who were continuing on to Alaska were being interviewed by investigators.

No delays were caused by the plane evacuation, and no injuries were reported.

Philadelphia International Airport, which handled 31 million passengers last year, is the only major airport serving the Philadelphia area, one of the largest metropolitan areas in the United States. Airlines that use Terminal A include Lufthansa, British Airways, US Airways, Air Jamaica and Frontier.

In June, flights were grounded at Reagan National Airport, near Washington, D.C., after a woman with a history of mental health problems told a US Airways ticket agent in Dayton, Ohio, that there was a bomb aboard a plane. The woman later said the warning came to her in a message from God, the director of Dayton International Airport said.

No explosives were found aboard the jet that flew from Dayton International to Reagan, and the woman was taken to a mental health facility.

Meanwhile, an American Airlines flight arriving at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport deployed its emergency slides for passengers earlier in the day after the plane's landing gear and several tires caught fire.

Want to leave a tip?

We answer to you. Help keep our content free of advertisers and big tech censorship by leaving a tip today.
Want to join the conversation?
Already a subscriber?