A NINETEEN YEAR OLD MAN, WHO TRIED TO BREAK INTO THE
CABIN OF A SOUTHWEST JET, WAS RESTRAINED BY PASSENGERS.
HE LATER COLLAPSED AND DIED.
AT THE TIME, IT WAS RULED A HEART ATTACK.
TODAY, THE AUTOPSY REPORTS STATES THAT THE MAN WAS MURDERED
BY THE FELLOW PASSENGERS THAT RESTRAINED HIM.
Back in August, when RMNews first reported this story, we added this comment at the front of the story.
"REMEMBER WHEN THE DERANGED PASSENGER ATTACKED THE PILOT ON
THE ALASKA AIR FLIGHT? HERE IS ANOTHER ONE!!!
Is this the way Egypt Air 990 went down?
BTW -- Southwest Air -- the Company Airline -- is the airline chosen to fly by CIA and other govt covert types -- they know it is the best around. Did someone send a "sleeper" to take out important passengers on this flight? If so, did the the men on
board SWA sent a strong message back to them? Or did the men who sent the "sleeper" kill him once he was on the ground and in custody -- Dead men tell no tales.
I only fly SWA -- it is the safest airline around.
Rayelan
###
I will let you draw your own conclusions, but if I were to bet on what happened, I would say the government agents, that someone wanted dead, enough to crash an entire plane, are the ones who killed the young man. These covert types probably realized what was happening and in anger, they beat him to death.
I am sure they did it to send a signal to the people who programmed and sent him, but they probably did it for another reason. It is almost impossible to completely deprogram a Manchurian Candidate. The only ones I have ever known who have
been deprogrammed have come from powerful families and because of this were considered useful.
"The U.S. Attorney's office described Jonathan Burton's Aug. 11 death as an act of self-defense by frightened passengers and said it would not file criminal charges."
Here is the most recent story - with some of my comments -- The story from August is inserted after it.
http://www.egroups.com/message/RMNEWS_DAILY_EMAILS/4671
From: Rayelan <rayelan@mindspring.com>
Date: Sat Sep 16, 2000 9:13pm
Subject: Teen Killed by Airplane Passengers Who Restrained Him
http://ap.tbo.com/ap/breaking/MGIZ8EMT7DC.html
Do you remember this story from about a month ago? (August 13)
The papers reported that after the teen tried to break into the
cockpit, he was restrained and then had a heart attack. What REALLY happened here?
Is this another case of a mind controlled programmed
Manchurian Candidate who was ordered by his controllers
to crash the plane?
###
Sep 16, 2000 - 05:52 PM
Teen Killed by Airplane Passengers Who Restrained Him
The Associated Press
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - A passenger who tried to break into the cockpit during a Southwest Airlines flight was killed by the passengers who restrained him, not by a heart attack, an autopsy concluded.
The U.S. Attorney's office described Jonathan Burton's Aug. 11 death as an act of self-defense by frightened passengers and said it would not file criminal charges.
Burton, 19, of Las Vegas, became combative 20 minutes before Flight 1763 was due to land, hitting other passengers and pounding on the locked cockpit door. As many as eight of the plane's 120 passengers subdued him and held him down until the flight arrived in Salt Lake City.
Burton died after being removed from the plane, and authorities believed he had died of a heart attack.
However, the autopsy report classified his death a homicide because it resulted from "intentional actions by another individual or individuals."
The report, released by Burton's family, said he suffocated. He also had bruises and scratches on his torso, face and neck and suffered blunt force injuries.
"He was strangled, beaten and kicked," said family attorney Kent Spence. "We'd like to know how this could have happened to this young man. This kid had no history of violence, he would sooner take a spider outside than kill it."
The autopsy found low levels of marijuana in Burton's body but said that was an "unlikely explanation" for his violent outburst.
The family has not decided whether to sue Southwest Airlines or the passengers, Spence said.
Federal officials recently reported a dramatic increase in air-rage incidents nationwide. Statistics from the Federal Aviation Administration showed 292 incidents of "unruly passengers" last year, up from 138 in 1995. The FAA can recommend fines of up to $25,000 for airline passengers who "assault, threaten, intimidate or interfere with a crew member."
---
On the Net:
Southwest Airlines: http://www.southwest.com/
SKYRAGE Foundation: http://www.skyrage.org/
###
http://www.egroups.com/message/RMNEWS_DAILY_EMAILS/2521
From: rayelan <rayelan@mindspring.com>
Date: Sun Aug 13, 2000 1:08pm
Subject: Jet Passenger Attacks Cockpit, Dies
From RMNews ---
REMEMBER WHEN THE DERANGED PASSENGER ATTACKED THE PILOT ON
THE ALASKA AIR FLIGHT? HERE IS ANOTHER ONE!!!
Is this the way Egypt Air 990 went down?
BTW -- Southwest Air -- the Company Airline -- is the airline chosen to fly by CIA and other govt covert types -- they know it is the best around. Did someone send a "sleeper" to take out important passengers on this flight? If so, did the the men on
board SWA sent a strong message back to them? Or did the men who sent the "sleeper" kill him once he was on the ground and in custody -- Dead men tell no tales.
I only fly SWA -- it is the safest airline around.
Rayelan
###
Jet Passenger Attacks Cockpit, Dies
The Associated Press
Saturday, Aug. 12, 2000; 11:19 p.m. EDT
SALT LAKE CITY –– A 19-year-old passenger on a Southwest Airlines flight tried to break into the cockpit, then died of an apparent heart attack after being taken into custody, an airline spokesman said Saturday.
The man, on a flight from Las Vegas to Salt Lake City, was pulled off the plane by airport security when the plane landed Friday night, Southwest spokesman Ed Stewart said.
Officers at the Salt Lake City International Airport identified the man as Jonathan Burton of Las Vegas and said he had suffered a heart attack.
"The plane was about 20 minutes from landing and that's when this gentleman did go into a rage and tried apparently to break into the cockpit doors," Stewart said Saturday.
"Up until 20 minutes before the flight landed, everything was fine," Stewart said. "For all we know, he could have had a seizure or something."
Stewart said crew members tried to restrain the man, but it took half a dozen passengers to help hold him down.
Airport duty manager Dennis Andersen said the man went into cardiac arrest after being pulled off the plane by airport security. He said no other information was immediately available, except that the case had been handed over to the FBI.
No one else on board the plane, carrying 121 passengers and five crew members, was reported injured.
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