Northwest Airlines Flight 327
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Northwest Airlines Flight 327 was a flight on June 29, 2004 from the Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport in Romulus, Michigan to the Los Angeles International Airport in Los Angeles, California. The suspicious behaviour of a party of 13 Syrian musicians, on their way to an engagement in San Diego, alarmed flight attendants and passengers. One passenger, journalist Annie Jacobsen, wrote a series of articles about the incident, bringing it to national attention. A redacted version of the Department of Homeland Security Inspector General's report was released in May 2007[1][2][3] as a result of a Freedom of Information Act request made by the Washington Times[4][5]
[edit] Flight 327
Before takeoff, 14 men of Middle Eastern descent boarded the aircraft. Thirteen of the 14 men were Syrian nationals in the USA on short-term visas, using one-way tickets which they had paid for in cash. Their visas had expired on 2004-06-10.[1]
During the flight, Annie Jacobsen, a writer for WomensWallStreet, believed that the men were acting suspiciously. She claimed that one of the flight attendants had previously notified an air marshal on board the flight that she thought the men were acting suspiciously.
In a series of articles for WomensWallStreet titled "Terror in the Skies, Again?," Jacobsen claimed that several other Flight 327 passengers have corroborated her story. One was so frightened by what she witnessed that she no longer travels by air. Others said they were convinced they were about to die. [6][7] One such passenger confirmed the story to the Washington Times.[8]
Debate over what happened on the flight became an Internet phenomenon, according to CNN's Aaron Brown. Jacobsen's articles were translated into many languages including Chinese, Swahili and German as it circulated around the globe.[9]
In the WomensWallStreet articles, Jacobsen detailed the activity she took to be suspicious. She claimed that before boarding, the men did not interact or seem to be part of a group. Further, she claimed that during boarding, each man made eye contact with each of the others and nodded as if in agreement. One man, who wore an orthopedic shoe, complained loudly, just before takeoff, that he needed to switch seats. Once in flight, one of the men took a large McDonald's bag to a lavatory, exiting with the bag nearly empty, and giving the thumbs up sign as he passed two others suspicious men. Some of the other men also took objects with them to the lavatory, such as a mass of cloth, a camera, and a cell phone. Throughout the flight, the men would get up in unison, walk to the lavatories, and congregate in the aisles in groups of two and three. One of the men, wearing a suit and sunglasses, stood a foot or so away from the cockpit door. When the captain announced clearance for landing, seven of the men stood in unison and went to the lavatory, each taking about four minutes. The last man to exit the lavatory supposedly dragged his forefinger across his neck as he passed one of the other men, mouthing the word "No."[9]
Upon arriving in Los Angeles, the 14 men that Jacobsen saw were detained for questioning and identity verification. The Federal Air Marshal Service concluded that they were Syrian band members en route to a San Diego casino to perform. Jacobsen claims, however, that only two of the men were briefly investigated and nobody has determined where the men went after leaving the airport.[10] The Sycuan Casino & Resort confirmed that Syrian singer Nour Mhanna performed there two days later, and that he brought his own backup band.[11]
In a later interview to TIME magazine, the lead air marshal aboard the flight stated, "there was never a time when my main partner or I felt there was an imminent threat to that airplane or the passengers." and "I understand why the passenger felt some anxiety about activity on Flight 327 but that kind of activity was unusual but not a security incident. There was never a threat to the plane." The Homeland Security report produced by the Inspector General revealed that this air marshal had noticed that the Syrians' travel visas were expired but the air marshal failed to report this information to his supervisors, claiming it was out of his jurisdiction. [12]
The Department of Homeland Security, Office of the Inspector General, spent twenty-two months investigating flight 327; the report has been classified,[13] but a redacted version reveals that the musical group's promoter, who was on the plane, had been involved in a similar incident in January 2004.[1]
A Washington Times story claimed that some air marshals believed that Northwest flight 327 was a dry run for a future terrorist attack involving commercial planes, but did not quote any air marshal making that claim, either with attribution or anonymously.[14] A followup story revealed the Freedom of Information Act request and promised more details to come.[4]
Gary Boettcher, president of the Coalition of Airline Pilots Associations, however, said that Jacobsen had likely witnessed a dry run, and that he had many similar experiences himself. Mark Bogosian, An American Airlines pilot, said that incidents like the one Jacobsen described were a "dirty little secret" that airline crew members had known for some time.[15]
Jacobsen's original article was distributed widely through emails, and the veracity of her claims was discussed and dismissed on the Snopes urban legend website. After the August 2006 thwarted terrorist attack in England, one which allegedly involved ten commercial airplanes being blown up by bombs built in the aircraft bathroom, talk radio shows across the country referenced Northwest Flight 327 as likely being a dry run, in spite of differences between the two: The accused in August 2006 case were British nationals with Pakistani connections, not Syrians (or band members), and no one was prosecuted due to events involving Flight 327.[16]
Federal Air Marshal P. Jeffrey Black [4] confirmed that in his opinion, flight 327 was a terrorist probe or dry run.[17]
[edit] References
- ^ a b c Review of Department's Handling of Suspicious Passengers Aboard Northwest Flight 327. Department of Homeland Security, Office of lnspector General (2006-03-30). Retrieved on 2007-05-27.
- ^ Review of Department's Handling of Suspicious Passengers Aboard Northwest Flight 327. Department of Homeland Security, Office of lnspector General (2006-03-30). Retrieved on 2007-05-30.
- ^ Office of Inspector General. Review of Department's Handling of Suspicious Passengers Abroad Northwest Flight 327, OIG-06-31 (PDF). U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Retrieved on 2007-12-28.
- ^ a b c More details on Flight 327 (2007-05-27). Retrieved on 2007-05-27.
- ^ Security flaws confirmed on Flight 327 (2007-05-29). Retrieved on 2007-05-30.
- ^ Jacobsen, Annie (2004-08-04). Part IV: Terror in the Skies, Again?. WomensWallStreet. Retrieved on 2007-05-27.
- ^ Jacobsen, Annie (2004-08-20). Part V: Another Passenger from Flight 327 Steps Forward With Disturbing New Details. WomensWallStreet. Retrieved on 2007-05-27.
- ^ Audrey Hudson (2004-07-29). Second passenger saw suspicious behavior. Washington Times. Retrieved on 2007-05-27.
- ^ a b Jacobsen, Annie (2004-07-19). Part I: Terror in the Skies, Again?. WomensWallStreet. Retrieved on 2006-08-11.
- ^ Jacobsen, Annie (2005-04-22). Part XIII: Annie Jacobsen Gets a Visit from the Feds. WomensWallStreet. Retrieved on 2007-05-27.
- ^ Clinton W. Taylor (2004-07-21). The Syrian Wayne Newton. National Review Online. Retrieved on 2007-05-27.
- ^ Donnelly, Sally B. (2004-08-04). An Air Marshal's View of Flight 327. Time. Retrieved on 2006-08-11.
- ^ Jacobsen, Annie (2007-02-06). Welcome to Annie Jacobsen’s Blog. WomensWallStreet.com Blog. Retrieved on 2007-03-05.
- ^ Audrey Hudson (2005-04-26). Passengers describe flight as a terrorist dry run. Washington Times. Retrieved on 2007-05-27.
- ^ Jacobsen, Annie (2004-07-19). Part II: Terror in the Skies, Again?. WomensWallStreet. Retrieved on 2007-05-27.
- ^ Terror in the Skies. Snopes (2004-07-28). Retrieved on 2006-08-11.
- ^ Patterico (2007-06-01). Air Marshal Goes on the Record Stating His Opinion That Flight 327 Was a Dry Run. Patterico's Pontifications. Patterico. Retrieved on 2007-12-28.