American Airlines passenger forces emergency landing by urinating, Delta air too

An American Airlines jet was forced to make an emergency landing after an unruly passenger allegedly exposed himself before urinating down the aisle of the plane. 

The perpetrator, a 25-year-old Oregon man who has not been named, was arrested after the plane diverted course from New Hampshire and returned back to Buffalo, New York, on Wednesday. 

He was charged with indecent exposure and was released after appearing in a Buffalo federal court, the US Attorney’s Office for the Western District of New York said. 

The passenger reportedly told police he had drank several whiskey and colas before boarding his initial flight from Oregon, and continued drinking heavily during a layover in Chicago.  

American Airlines said after the lewd incident that the plane was able to restart its journey from Buffalo after the passenger was removed. 

'We thank our team members for their professionalism and our customers for their understanding,' the airline said in a statement. 

According to the reported criminal complaint, the passenger said that he got up to use the jet's restroom when the issue occurred. 

He said he was returning to his seat when he suffered a 'medical urination problem.'  

Delta Airlines plane flying from Detroit in the U.S. to the Dutch capital Amsterdam made an emergency landing after passengers were served spoiled food and fell ill.

Flight 136 was diverted to JFK Airport in New York early on July 3, a spokesperson for the U.S. carrier was quoted as saying by The Daily Mail.Medical staff met the A330 aircraft, which had 277 passengers on board, and provided first aid to 14 passengers and 10 crew members, all of whom declined treatment.

All were provided with hotel rooms and transport, and will be rebooked to continue to their destination.

One frustrated passenger took to social media, asking how the airline was "going to get me to Amsterdam today" after the flight had to divert "because you served passengers ‘contaminated’ food."

The spokesperson added: "Delta teams will immediately work to gather information on how this incident occurred. This is not the service Delta is known for, and we sincerely apologize to our customers for the inconvenience and delay in their travels."

Another Delta airplane made an emergency landing in New York in April after an emergency slide fell off.

No injuries were reported on the Boeing 767, which was carrying 176 passengers.

Airlines serve thousands of meals a day to customers, and such incidents are rare, Henry Harteveldt, a travel consultant and founder of Atmosphere Research Group, said.

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