The Mercury News

Pepper spray emergency follows disturbing photo

- By Harry Harris and Rick Hurd hharris@bayareanew­sgroup.com and rhurd@bayareanew­sgroup.com

First came the grisly crime scene photos, sent to several panicked passengers Friday on Hawaiian Airlines Flight 23. Then came the pepper spray.

A 15-year-old girl sharing a grisly mock crime scene photo from one of her high school classes with her mother caused the Maui-bound flight to return to its gate at Oakland Airport on Friday morning when the photo accidental­ly went out to other passengers, authoritie­s said.

The flight eventually took off and was set to land safely in Hawaii when a can of pepper spray went off inside, requiring emergency help for several people aboard, Hawaiian Airlines said.

Twelve passengers and three flight attendants were treated for respirator­y issues and released by People are gathered in a back galley on a Hawaiian Airlines flight from Oakland to Kahului, Hawaii, after a can of pepper spray went off inside the plane on Friday.

emergency responders at the airport in Kahului, Hawaii, airline spokesman Alex Da Silva said.

A passenger illegally brought the pepper spray on the plane and it apparently discharged accidental­ly, Da Silva said in a statement. The airline could not provide any details about the passenger or why officials believe the release was accidental.

The flight crew of the Boeing 767 declared an emergency to get priority to land at the airport in Hawaii. The plane carried 256 passengers and 10 crew members.

Nicholas Andrade said he and his fiancée were trying to take a nap in their seats just behind first class when the problems began.

“I was woken up by someone having a coughing fit. But what I came to find out is that it wasn’t one person coughing, it was many people coughing. And then everyone was coughing and then we were coughing. And the flight attendants were covering their faces and passengers started covering their faces,” he said.

People had trouble breathing and were shouting, Andrade said.

“People were definitely panicked,” he said.

Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion spokeswoma­n Lisa Farbstein said in an email that her agency and Maui police were investigat­ing.

She said the pepper spray canister held about 1.5 ounces. The fine for bringing pepper spray onto an airplane can reach $1,960 or higher, Farbstein said.

Meanwhile, the teenager who accidental­ly shared the mock crime scene photo and her mother were not allowed to continue on when the flight to Maui departed about 90 minutes late. They were instead rebooked on a flight for Hawaii on Saturday, Oakland Airport spokeswoma­n Keonnis Taylor said.

Alameda County Sheriff’s Office deputies first received reports about the incident around 7:20 a.m. Sheriff’s spokesman Sgt. Ray Kelly said the girl used her phone’s AirDrop app to send a mock crime scene photo of a body used in her med-biology class to her mom sitting next to her. AirDrop is a feature that allows Macs and iOS devices to share files.

But by using the method, the files also can mistakenly end up on other nearby phones — in this case, the phones of other passengers, Kelly said.

Those passengers alerted flight attendants, who showed the image to the pilots.

The captain made the decision to notify authoritie­s and return to the gate, Kelly said.

Deputies were waiting for the two when the plane returned to the gate, Kelly said. Once they learned the details of what happened, they were released.

The sheriff’s office will file an incident report with federal officials, but the agency sees no reason the two should be restricted from flying, Kelly said.

“I imagine they will think twice about AirDroppin­g photos,” he said. “Especially on an airplane.”

Staff writer Tatiana Sanchez and The Associated Press contribute­d to this report. Contact Harry Harris at 510-208-6443 and Rick Hurd at 925-945-4789.

 ?? NICHOLAS ANDRADE VIA AP ??
NICHOLAS ANDRADE VIA AP

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