On Thursday (5 May), a passenger was taken into custody after opening an airplane door and walking onto the wing.
As United Airlines flight 2478 from San Diego to O’Hare International Airport, Chicago, was taxiing to the gate after landing, 57-year-old Randy Frank Davila opened the door and got onto the wing.
He has since been taken into custody by the Chicago Police Department and charged with reckless conduct.
Advert
A recording from Air Traffic Control, obtained by NBC confirmed the incident: "We had to stop short of Gate Bravo 3. Somebody pulled the rear right over wing exit. Someone in seat 21 Bravo has exited the aircraft and is on the ramp."
Chicago Police said (as reported by CNN): "A male subject was onboard a plane that was approaching the gate when he pulled the emergency exit and walked out onto the wing of the plane.
"The subject then slid down the wing and onto the airfield."
Advert
However, employees quickly responded to the incident, with the airline saying: "Our ground crew stopped the individual outside of the aircraft, and the person is now with law enforcement.
"The plane then arrived at the gate and all passengers deplaned safely. The safety of our customers and crew is our highest priority."
When officers arrived at the scene, Davila was placed in custody.
Advert
While it is unclear why the man walked out onto the wing, police said that he 'denied alcohol service by the flight attendants' and was 'talking to himself throughout the flight,' as cited by the Daily Mail.
Mary Ellen Eagelston, a passenger on the flight, told NBC: "Everyone was kind of a little surprised and [said] did we really see what we really saw?
"I just saw him exiting out and that was it. I guess he landed on the wing and then jumped down to the tarmac."
While passengers were left stunned, flight attendants 'did not witness any of the described events'.
Advert
This may in part be because flight attendants remain seated during take-off and landing, seeing to their duties/passengers when it is safe to do so.
Davila is expected to appear in court on 27 June, however, he will reportedly not face federal charges as there was 'no signage on the emergency door nor the tarmac advising the subject that exiting a moving plane would constitute criminal trespass to restricted areas'.
If you have a story you want to tell, send it to UNILAD via [email protected]