An Air France flight bound for Paris was diverted to Montreal last night after an anonymous threat was received, airport officials confirmed.
Flight 083 from San Francisco made an unscheduled stop in Montreal just after 11:20 p.m. ET, said Francois Asselin, a spokesman for AĆ©roports de Montreal.
Air France confirmed around 4:45 a.m. that the threat was a false alarm.
The plane left for Paris around 6 a.m.
“We were told we had to be diverted for operational reasons by the captain,” passenger Thomas Serval told CBC News. “We were anxious when we landed safely.”
The Boeing 777-300ER was carrying 231 passengers and 15 staff members. The pilot decided to land in Montreal out of precaution, and the plane stayed on the tarmac for some time with passengers on board.
Police and firefighters were called to the scene at Pierre Elliott Trudeau International Airport, according to standard procedure.
Gilles Raymond told The Associated Press that he and his fellow passengers spent at least an hour on the plane during verifications after being originally told the diversion was for “technical reasons.”
“Everyone is pretty relaxed,” Raymond said while still inside. “There was no panic, no stress. Everyone is waiting in their seats. Some people are sleeping, and some are checking their phones or eating ice cream that the flight attendants gave them.”
It is not the first time the airline’s flights have been diverted since the Nov. 13 attacks in Paris that killed 130 people and left hundreds injured.
On Nov. 17, flights bound for France were diverted to Halifax and Salt Lake City, Utah due to anonymous threats later found to be baseless after a sweep of the planes.
CBC News
3 TSA screeners at San Francisco arrested for smuggling
Three security screeners at San Francisco International Airport took payoffs to wave cocaine smugglers through airport security, federal authorities say in charges against the three.
The U.S. attorney’s office announced the charges of fraud and cocaine smuggling in a statement Friday.
Federal prosecutors allege security screeners Joseph Scott, Michael Castaneda, and Jessica Scott on five occasions took a fee in exchange for allowing through luggage that they were told contained cocaine. Each incident actually was an undercover sting operation by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and U.S. Transportation Security Administration, federal prosecutors said.
The three were responsible for running the airport electronic screening and inspecting baggage. They were employees of security subcontractor Covenant Aviation Security. The company did not immediately return a telephone call Saturday seeking comment.
Authorities released Joseph Scott and Jessica Scott on $50,000 bonds on Friday. Castaneda remains in custody pending a detention hearing Monday.
Conviction on charges of smuggling over 10 pounds of cocaine carries a maximum sentence of life in prison.
ABC News
Alaska Airlines launches new flights from Orange County
SEATTLE, Nov. 3, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Alaska Airlines will add new service from Orange County, California to Santa Rosa/Sonoma County, California and Reno/Tahoe, Nevada starting March 16, 2016.
“These new routes will bring low fares and an elevated flight experience to our valued Los Angeles area customers,” said John Kirby, Alaska Airlines’ vice president of capacity planning. “With the addition of Santa Rosa and Reno, Alaska will offer 13 peak daily departures to six destinations, including Los Cabos and Puerto Vallarta, from Orange County’s John Wayne Airport.”
Alaska is offering introductory one-way fares starting at $79* each way. Customers must purchase their tickets by Nov. 9 and travel by June 8, 2016 to take advantage of the introductory fares.
The flights will be operated by Horizon Air using 76-seat Q400 aircraft. Customers can reserve seats at no charge and enjoy complimentary snacks, soft drinks, Starbucks coffee and tea and Northwest wine and microbrews.
Yahoo Finance