Some thing to giggle about....

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FBI: Airline passenger restrained with duct tape

By MARLON A. WALKER, Associated Press Writer Marlon A. Walker, Associated Press Writer – Wed Nov 5, 7:32 pm ET
RALEIGH, N.C. – An airline crew used duct tape to keep a passenger in her seat because they say she became unruly, fighting flight attendants and grabbing other passengers, forcing the flight to land in North Carolina.
Maria Esther Castillo of Oswego, N.Y., is due in court Thursday, charged with resisting arrest and interfering with the operations of a flight crew aboard United Airlines Flight 645, from Puerto Rico to Chicago.
Castillo, 45, struck a flight attendant on the buttocks with the back of her hand during Saturday's flight, FBI Special Agent Peter Carricato said in a criminal complaint filed in U.S. District Court in Charlotte. She also stood and fell onto the head of a blind passenger and later started pulling the person's hair, the complaint stated.
Ankle cuffs kept slipping off Castillo, so the flight crew and two passengers were forced to use duct tape to keep her in her seat, the complaint states.
She calmed as the pilot diverted the flight to Charlotte-Douglass International Airport, but became disruptive again when authorities boarded the plane to remove her, authorities said.
Carricato states that a passenger saw Castillo having drinks in an airport bar before boarding. She bought another drink on the plane. Flight attendants stopped serving her alcohol because of her behavior, the complaint states.
United spokesman Jeff Kovick said Wednesday that safety is the company's top priority and that it's cooperating with authorities.
FBI spokeswoman Amy Thoreson on Wednesday declined to comment on the ongoing investigation.
A message left seeking comment wasn't immediately returned by Castillo's attorney, Julia Mimms.
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Important uses of Duct Tape.
#15174: Restraining a passenger 35,000ft above the ground.
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So ... if you get asked in an interview how you would handle an unrully drunken passenger in the friendly skies, the answer is duct tape!
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We all know that duct tape fixes everything. The sad thing is that the dumb lady will probably sue the airline for public humiliation. With our wonderful "justice" system, she might just win.
Aside from that, just one question comes to mind: who had easy access to duct tape on that flight, and why?
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Quote: We all know that duct tape fixes everything. The sad thing is that the dumb lady will probably sue the airline for public humiliation. With our wonderful "justice" system, she might just win.
Aside from that, just one question comes to mind: who had easy access to duct tape on that flight, and why?
It was probably in someone's carry on. I was on flight a few weeks ago and some guy had to duct tape one of the overhead bins because it kept coming open.
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Quote: It was probably in someone's carry on. I was on flight a few weeks ago and some guy had to duct tape one of the overhead bins because it kept coming open.
Yeah, stuff like that is what I was afraid of! Is that even legal? Are not the cargo bins supposed to be secure and able to withstand 15% greater load than the passenger seats? (14 CFR 121.285) I'm sure it did a lot for passenger confidence when someone taped a cargo bin closed.
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Quote: who had easy access to duct tape on that flight, and why?
It's standard equipment, for this very reason...
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Duct Tape is like the force. It has a light side, a dark side, and it holds the universe together
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Quote: Duct Tape is like the force. It has a light side, a dark side, and it holds the universe together
That is hilarious. I hope you don't mind if I use that quote in the future!
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Quote: So ... if you get asked in an interview how you would handle an unrully drunken passenger in the friendly skies, the answer is duct tape!
So, crash axe isn't the best answer?
(it is for me)

CE
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