A sky marshal (also known as air marshal or flight marshal) is an undercover law enforcement or counter terrorist agent on board a commercial aircraft to counter aircraft hijackings. Sky marshals may be provided by airlines such as El Al (who provide sky marshals on every flight), or by government agencies such as the Austrian Einsatzkommando Cobra, Royal Canadian Mounted Police, German Federal Police or US Federal Air Marshal Service.
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In response to the September 11 incidents, the Commonwealth instituted an Air Security Officer (ASO) Program under the Australian Federal Police in December 2001.[1][2] These officers are generally referred to in the media as Sky Marshals.[3] The ASO Programme provides a discreet anti-hijacking capability for Australian civil aviation by providing armed security personnel on board aircraft.[2] This involves both random and intelligence-led placement of armed ASOs on flights operated by Australian registered air carriers, including domestic and international flights into and out of Australia.
Officers are armed and trained and equipped for a variety of situations on both domestic and international flights.[4][5]
In Austria, air marshals are provided since 1981 by the Einsatzkommando Cobra.
The Canadian Air Carrier Protection/Protective Program (CACPP) began on September 17, 2002 [6] when a Memorandum of Understanding was signed between the Royal Canadian Mounted Police with Transport Canada, the authority responsible for Canadian aviation security, and the Canadian Air Transport Security Authority (CATSA), for the implementation and administration of the CACPP.[7]
The program is conducted by specially trained undercover, armed RCMP officers (known as Aircraft Protective Officers- APOs) on selected domestic and international flights and all flights to the Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.[8] Pilots and flight attendants are advised of their presence and the officer will physically intervene should an unauthorized person attempt to gain control of an aircraft.[9] APOs, however, will not be involved in controlling unruly passengers.[10] While they are peace officers within Canadian territories, they rely on section 6(2) of the Tokyo Convention as a legal basis for intervening an incident outside of Canadian airspace.[10]
By law, such officers are exempt from acquiring a permit for importing or exporting their duty firearms when crossing the border.[11] However, the exact nature of their weaponry is not released to the public except they are "deadly and effective and should not damage the aircraft." [12]
The US Federal Aviation Administration began its "Sky Marshal" program in 1968, which eventually became the Federal Air Marshal Service in 1985. That year, an Egyptian security officer on board EgyptAir Flight 648 opened fire on three Abu Nidal Organization hijackers, killing one before being fatally shot himself.
In 2005, Rigoberto Alpizar was shot dead by two sky marshals on a jetway at Miami International Airport.
Currently, Federal Air Marshal Officers are under Transportation Security Administration.
Under the Visible Intermodal Prevention Response (VIPR) system, started up circa 2005, FAMs began to patrol non-aviation sites like bus terminals and train stations. [13]
In the film Executive Decision, the fictional Oceanic Airlines Flight 343 carried a sky marshal armed with a pistol, who played a minor role in subduing the Algerian hijackers.
The movie Anger Management starts off with a confrontation between Adam Sandler's character David "Dave" Buznik and an air marshal (played by Isaac C. Singleton Jr).
The air marshal played by Peter Sarsgaard is a central character in the suspense thriller Flightplan, starring Jodie Foster, Erika Christensen and Sean Bean.
In the film Harold & Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay, air marshals tackle the titular protagonists to the ground after a passenger sees Kumar's marijuana bong in the lavatory, believing it to be a bomb, and the smoke coming from it poison gas; they are then sent to Guantanamo Bay as suspected terrorists.
In Passenger 57, the Chief Air Marshal of Atlantic International Airlines stops a group of hijackers from taking over a Lockheed L-1011 Tristar airliner.
In the movie Get Smart, the main character Maxwell Smart is mistakenly tackled by a sky marshal while beginning a mission on-board a plane.
In the film Due Date, Robert Downey Jr.'s character is shot with a rubber bullet by a sky marshal who mistakes him for a terrorist
In the film Bridesmaids, one of the main characters, Megan, is seated next to 'Air Marshal John', who repeatedly denies being an air marshal until trouble commences.