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Charles A. Lindbergh captured the hearts of Americans during his successful non-stop flight from New York to Paris in the Sprint of St. Louis on May 20th, 1927. This famous American Aviator purchased his first airplane and learned to fly on the grounds of what in now South Georgia Technical College
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Passenger Charged After False Bomb Threat Diverts American Airlines Flight to Detroit

Federal authorities say passenger Jason Douglas Pazol forced American Airlines Flight 2819 from New York’s JFK to Chicago to make an emergency landing at Detroit Metro Airport on March 29 after he allegedly made a false bomb threat during what he described as a breakdown over medication issues. According to a federal complaint, Pazol told passengers and crew, “I will blow this f------ plane up” and “I swear to God, I am going to do something terrible,” prompting the diversion with about 150 passengers and crew aboard. The plane was moved to an isolated area, searched for explosives, and all passengers and crew were removed and re‑screened; no explosives were found and no one was injured. Prosecutors say Pazol later admitted he made the threat because he believed other passengers were not safe around him and knew such statements would get the plane on the ground, and he was taken to a hospital for evaluation after authorities determined he was unarmed. He is now charged with conveying false or misleading information, a federal offense that reflects post‑9/11 zero tolerance for threats that disrupt commercial aviation even when no bomb exists.

Aviation Security and Safety Federal Crime and Courts

📌 Key Facts

  • Defendant identified as Jason Douglas Pazol, a passenger on American Airlines Flight 2819
  • Flight from JFK to Chicago was diverted to Detroit Metro Airport on March 29 with about 150 passengers and crew aboard
  • Pazol allegedly said, “I will blow this f------ plane up,” triggering an emergency landing and full security response
  • No explosives were found after the aircraft was isolated, searched, and everyone re‑screened; no injuries were reported
  • Pazol is charged federally with conveying false or misleading information and was taken to a hospital for evaluation

📊 Relevant Data

In 2024, the FAA reported over 2,102 unruly passenger incidents on US flights, an increase from 2,031 in 2023, though down from the peak of 5,973 in 2021.

2024 Saw A Rise In Unruly Passenger Incidents — Simple Flying

Among US adults with any mental illness, 58% of White adults received mental health services, compared to 44% of Hispanic adults, 39% of Black adults, and 33% of Asian adults as of 2024; population percentages are White (57%), Hispanic (20%), Black (12%), Asian (6%).

Introduction - Key Data on Health and Health Care by Race and Ethnicity — KFF

In a study of 228 air rage incidents on international flights from 2016 to 2020, mental health issues were identified as a precipitating factor in only 0.4% of cases, compared to alcohol in 55.7%; most unruly passengers were male (76.2%) and aged 30-39 (26.8%).

Descriptive analysis of air rage incidents aboard international commercial flights: An observational study — ScienceDirect

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