Miami Herald

AIRLINE MECHANIC IS ACCUSED OF SABOTAGE

FEDERAL CHARGES SAY HE WAS MOTIVATED BY FRUSTRATIO­N OVER STALLED CONTRACT NEGOTIATIO­NS.

- BY JAY WEAVER jweaver@miamiheral­d.com

The plane’s takeoff from Miami was aborted

An American Airlines mechanic was arrested Thursday on a sabotage charge accusing him of disabling a navigation system on a flight with 150 people aboard before it was scheduled to take off from Miami Internatio­nal Airport this summer.

The reason, according to a criminal complaint affidavit filed in Miami federal court: Abdul-Majeed Marouf Ahmed Alani, a veteran employee, was upset over stalled union contract negotiatio­ns.

None of the passengers and crew on the flight to Nassau were injured because the tampering with the air-data module caused an error alert as the pilots powered up the plane’s engines on the runway July 17, according to a criminal complaint affidavit filed in Miami federal court.

As a result, flight No. 2834 was aborted and taken out of service for routine maintenanc­e at America’s hangar at MIA, where the tampering with the ADM system was discovered during an inspection. An AA mechanic found a loosely connected tube in front of the nose gear underneath the cockpit. The tube had been deliberate­ly obstructed with some sort of hard foam material.

Alani is charged with “willfully damaging, destroying or disabling an aircraft” and is expected to have his first appearance in Miami federal court on Friday.

According to the complaint filed Thursday, Alani glued the foam inside the tube leading from outside the plane to its air-data module, a system that reports aircraft speed, pitch, and other critical flight data. As a result, if the plane had taken off that day from MIA, the pilots would have had to operate the aircraft manually because the ADM system would not have received any computer data.

After his arrest Thursday, the affidavit says that Alani told federal air marshals assigned to the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force that “his intention was not to cause harm to the aircraft or its passengers.”

He said that his motive in tampering with the navigation­al system was because he was “upset” over stalled contract negotiatio­ns between the mechanics’ union and American Airlines and said “the dispute had affected him financiall­y.”

He further said he only tampered with the plane

“in order to cause a delay or have the flight canceled in anticipati­on of obtaining overtime work,” according to the affidavit.

Relations have become so strained between the 12,000-employee mechanics’ union and American Airlines that the organizati­on vowed a “bloody” battle over the course of the summer, leading to bitter legal fights in Texas, where the company is headquarte­red.

Federal air marshals zeroed in on Alani, a longtime American Airlines mechanic, after reviewing video footage that captured him exiting a white truck on the morning of July 17 at Concourse D and approachin­g the plane, which had just arrived from Orlando, the affidavit says. The footage showed Alani, who walks with a limp, accessing the aircraft’s compartmen­t where the navigation­al system was located in the plane, according to the affidavit, which was filed by the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

Alani, the federal charges said, spent about seven minutes doing the sabotage.

The air marshals, part of the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion, also conducted interviews with three other AA mechanics who were with Alani after he tampered with the plane. They helped investigat­ors identify him from the video footage. It was not yet clear if Alani had retained an attorney.

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