Thursday, April 12, 2012

Jetblue pilot

  • A grand jury has indicted a JetBlue pilot and charged him with interference with a flight crew following a mid-air outburst that forced one of the airlines planes to make an emergency landing in Texas last month, court documents showed on Thursday.
  • (msnbc.com)
  • LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) -- A JetBlue Airways pilot accused of disrupting a Las Vegas-bound flight when he left the cockpit screaming about religion and terrorists has been indicted. Court documents posted Thursday show Clayton F.
  • (msnbc.com)
  • A JetBlue Airways captain whose midair meltdown last month forced his co-pilot to lock him out of the cockpit has been indicted. Court documents posted Thursday show Clayton F.
  • (msnbc.com)
  • DALLAS (AP) -- The case of the JetBlue captain who came unglued at 35,000 feet has focused attention on what some aviation experts say is a flimsy system for detecting psychological problems in pilots.
  • (Yahoo Finance)
  • SALEM, Ohio (AP) -- Friends and relatives of the co-pilot of JetBlue Airways Flight 191 say he doesnt want to be considered a hero — but thats exactly what many are calling him.
  • (Yahoo Finance)
  • AMARILLO, Texas -- The JetBlue pilot who disrupted a New York-to-Las Vegas flight with an incoherent rant about religion has been indicted.
  • (Pocono Record)
  • LUBBOCK, Texas — A JetBlue Airways captain accused of disrupting a Las Vegas-bound flight when he left the cockpit screaming about religion and terrorists has been indicted, according to court documents posted Thursday.
  • (Post-Crescent)
  • WASHINGTON/CHICAGO (Reuters) - With his captain restrained and locked out of the cockpit, the co-pilot of JetBlue Flight 191 acted calmly and quickly to get the Airbus jet and 135 other passengers and crew down safely.
  • (Reuters India)
  • The JetBlue Airways Corp.
  • (Businessweek)
  • There has never been a safer time to fly, according to the official statistics, but as the mid-air breakdown of a JetBlue pilot showed this week when things go wrong at 20,000 feet, the consequences can be terrifying.
  • (The Guardian)

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