LOS ANGELES — Chris Llewellyn was staring out the window of Delta Airlines Flight 110, watching the landscape of Los Angeles rise up toward the plane today, when he heard the screams of a flight attendant: “Help me! Help me!”
Turning quickly, he saw that a passenger had pushed the attendant to the floor and was trying to open the rear exit.
“Don’t come near me,” the man warned. “I have a bomb. I have a bomb.”
“I thought this guy was going to open the door. I was thinking, ‘I’m not going to go down with the plane, “’ said Llewellyn, 26, a 6-foot guitarist, who was flying into Los Angeles from Atlanta on Wednesday morning for a television appearance with hip-hop artist Asher Roth.
Along with a dozen other passengers, Llewellyn ran down the aisle, into the galley area and jumped on the man, pulling him away from the exit door.
“He was struggling hard-core,” Llewellyn said. “I was holding down his arm. Somebody had a foot on his head. Everyone was holding down a different body part. He was going nuts. I was telling him to chill because he’s not going anyplace.”
The jet landed safely and no bomb was found. Still, local and federal authorities credited Llewellyn and the other good Samaritans with helping save the day. Many of the other 230 passengers also were grateful.
Mary Hughes, 48, a state correctional records official from Panama City, Fla., said she first became aware of a problem when she saw other passengers running by her seat screaming, “No! No! Don’t! Stop him!”
“What concerned me was that we were getting ready to land, and I was thinking, ‘Oh, my God, we are still in the air. What if he opens the door?”’ she said. “It was pretty creepy there.”
Hughes said passengers were relieved when the plane landed and authorities boarded to take the suspect away.
“I was glad I was on a plane where passengers fought,” she said. “It was great the passengers got involved.”
The Los Angeles Police Department identified the man as Lawrence Johnson, 45, of Kentucky. He was booked by Los Angeles airport police on suspicion of making a false bomb threat.
A law-enforcement source said there was no air marshal on board. There has been much debate in recent years about how many air marshals actually fly on commercial flights, with some former employees claiming the number has been declining. But the Transportation Security Administration denied any problems. Officials refuse to provide numbers but have said “the number of air marshals TSA employs is in the thousands.”
In the case of today’s Delta flight, passengers were able to secure the suspect on their own. When the plane landed, a flight attendant retrieved a restraining kit and the group was able to put restraints on the suspect’s arms, Llewellyn said.
He said the suspect then asked, “What am I being charged with?” and someone answered, “Assaulting a flight attendant.”
“He flipped out over that,” Llewellyn said.
Despite the incident, Llewellyn and other members of his band were able to get to NBC’s Burbank studios in time for sound check. They were scheduled to appear on NBC’s “Last Call With Carson Daly.”
Asher Roth is an up-and-coming rapper who has been named by MTV as one of the “MCs to Watch in 2009.”
Tonight, Llewellyn was ready to move on. “The whole thing happened in about two to three minutes,” he said. “It’s all kind of a blur now.”
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