Posted on 08/17/2006 11:36:12 AM PDT by Diddle E. Squat
BOSTON (AP) A woman on a trans-Atlantic flight diverted to Boston for security concerns passed several notes to crew members, urinated on the cabin floor and made comments the crew believed were references to al-Qaida and the Sept. 11 attacks, according to an affidavit filed Thursday.
Catherine C. Mayo, 59, of Braintree, Vt., was to appear in federal court later Thursday on a charge of interfering with a flight crew after disrupting United 923 as it flew from London to Washington, D.C., on Wednesday.
The flight, with 182 passengers and 12 crew members, landed safely with the escort of two F-15s after the pilot declared an emergency on board.
The scare came just a week after London authorities said they foiled a terror plot to blow up trans-Atlantic flights. Federal officials quickly determined there were no indications of terrorism ties.
According to an affidavit by FBI Special Agent Daniel Choldin filed in U.S. District Court in Boston, flight attendants noticed Mayo about 90 minutes into the flight because she was pushing against the aircraft bulkhead. When the attendant told her to return to her seat, Mayo said she wanted to speak to an air marshal and made statements about knowing that people wanted to see what was in her bag.
FBI spokeswoman Gail Marcinkiewicz confirmed Thursday that authorities found a screwdriver and an unspecified number of cigarette lighters in her bag, items which are banned under new security regulations. Marcinkiewicz also confirmed that matches were found Mayo's bag.
She also had a bottle of water, which did not appear to be supplied by the flight crew. It wasn't clear how the items made it through airport security.
Since a foiled terror plot surfaced in London last week, airports have tightened security in both the United Kingdom and the U.S. Liquids and gels have been banned from carry-on luggage, and even tighter restrictions are in place in Britain. The terror plot apparently involved using such liquids to make and detonate bombs aboard planes.
Later during the flight, according to the affidavit, Mayo asked a flight attendant: "Is this a training flight for United Flight 93?" The flight attendant didn't know if she made a mistake because the flight was actually Flight 923, or if she was referring to Flight 93, the hijacked plane that crashed in Pennsylvania on Sept. 11.
During that time, she was "biting her fingers, rubbing her feet and in a constant state of movement. She appeared very agitated," the affidavit said.
She wrote in a note and said to flight attendants that she had been in a country illegally, and later said she had photographs of Pakistan.
"She stated that the photographs would be awful, and she indicated that they related to the people that she had been with in the mountains of Pakistan," the affidavit said.
Her U.S. passport indicated that on Aug. 15 she had left Pakistan and entered the United Kingdom, according to the affidavit. As many as 17 people have been arrested in Pakistan in connection with the London terror plot.
Flight attendants summoned the captain, who spoke to Mayo. During the conversation, she made reference to there being "six steps to building some unspecified thing."
"She made reference to being with people associated with two words. She stated that she could not say what the two words were because the last time that she had said the two words she had been kicked off of a flight in the United Arab Emirates," according to the affidavit.
The captain and purser both believed that she was referring to al-Qaida, Choldin wrote.
About 35 minutes later, when she tried to go to the bathroom, the flight attendants directed her to a different lavatory. Instead, she pulled down her pants and urinated on the floor, Choldin wrote in the affidavit, which was based on his interviews and those of other federal officials.
At that point, the captain ordered her restrained. Two male passengers helped a flight attendant tackle Mayo and restrain her in plastic cuffs. She remained seated in the galley area of plane until the flight landed, according to the affidavit.
The outburst on the flight just a week after London authorities said they foiled a terror plot to blow up trans-Atlantic flights prompted a massive security scare.
Gov. Mitt Romney said the woman was claustrophobic and became so upset she had to be restrained, and passengers said Mayo appeared to have emotional problems.
"She was in a frenzy," passenger Martin Drinkwater of London told The Boston Globe. "She then pulled her trousers and knickers down and squatted on the floor."
Antony Nash, 31, of San Diego, said he grew nervous watching the muttering woman seated near him, as she paced and made too many trips to the bathroom. The pilot did not make a general announcement to passengers of what was happening.
"I noticed F-15s next to the plane. I said, 'Oh my God.' And then we saw the emergency vehicles," Nash said.
Terror scares garner particular attention in Boston because of Logan's history. Members of al-Qaida hijacked two planes from Logan on Sept. 11, 2001, and flew them into the World Trade Center towers in New York.
Logan airport also was where an American Airlines Paris-Miami flight was diverted in 2001 when Richard Reid, the so-called shoe bomber, tried to blow up the plane. He was thwarted by attendants and passengers after he tried to light a fuse leading to the concealed plastic explosives in his sneakers. He is now serving a life prison sentence.
OBTW, she is a 59-year old white native-born American grandma. Aren't the simpletons that scream "racially profiling is all we need to do" always saying we are wasting time searching white grandmothers?
OK. We DO need to profile caucasian grandmothers coming from Pakistan via Dubai via London. And we need to check babies for bombs coming from Pakistan via Dubai via London. Better now?
Why are you blaming the US, when the flight started on foreign soils?
Any profiler would see that she came from Pakistan and that would warrant special attention. This is an argument FOR profiling, not against it.
It looks like she's a kooky Leftie who is involved with a Pakistani man (on the link, a poster found reference to a letter she wrote in 2002 talking about her Pakistani fiance)
Possibility there's something going on here
The weakness of profiling, is that Muslim men can use Western women to carry stuff through security for them
The strength of profiling, that anyone who comes from Pakistan is a potential threat regardless of skin color.
What about the "Al-Queda" notes? One in english and one in arabic if I remember correctly. everything else seems to match, but I hear nothing about that one. Oh. And the vaseline.
"Vaseline TM" vs. "handcream"
We don't know what sort of gel agent it was but whatever it was was prohibited.
Son says that man can't travel to the US.
The thought of her being a useful tool (or useful idiot) crossed my mind also. But it didn't sound as though she had the makings, although she did have prohibited items with her. That in itself is suspicious.
This could get interesting!
Well, you figure they've got to dip into a pool of unstable wackos to begin with in order to fish out recruits. That does make it likely that some are going to wash out at the last minute. While they try to deceive by using stupid Western women, it's simply not going to be as easy as with the muslim natives, where they have the advantage of inbreeding.
The person she reminds me of is that Deb Fritsch creature, the one who threatened the blogger's toddler daughter. That one, both seem like that same person.
yup. Vermont.
Could be I 'spose. I think she's goofy enough.
What, are you trying to increase tourism to Pakistan? Do know how many desperate women would make a stop-over in Pakistan, with that kind of incentive? Sheesh!
Yeah, and they will be ready to tie you up at your command. Whoops, have I invented the female equivalent of Hooters Airline? :)
Bingo. I have talked to airport cops who have told me about some of the stuff they took off of blue-haired old ladies. In fact, if you're a smart terrorist looking to pull some act, lonely old ladies, ugly young ones, or horney men make for easy targets.
El Al has the right system. They hire smart people for security, not drop-outs, and they teach those people how to spot and profile people physically and psychologically. Apart from the obvious that a mental midget could spot, ethnic appearance does not mean squat. Richard Reed looked like a black guy with a British accent, and he damn near took out 300 people with his shoe. Tallaban-boy Johnny Lind would have probably done whatever these Islamonazis told him to do. You can't tell who's a damn jihadi by looks alone.
Everyone should be suspect including you and me. That sucks, but that is the way it is.
I hate the PC too, and I agree that anyone with a Mideast accent or background should be checked closely. But I'm just as tired of the uninformed bitching too. There are "normal looking people" who are every bit as dangerous as Mohammad Atta.
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