"Body found on jet may be missing Norwegian teen" Associated Press June 06, 2014
AMSTERDAM — A body found in the wheel well of a plane that landed at Amsterdam’s Schiphol airport on Thursday might be that of a missing teenage boy, Norwegian authorities said.
Police said the 17-year-old from Larvik, in southern Norway, went missing Wednesday morning and was the subject of a search by emergency services.
In a statement, the Norwegian police said they couldn’t be absolutely sure, ‘‘but the description and objects found with the dead person indicate with a high degree of certainty that it is the 17-year-old.’’ They said they have contacted the youth’s parents.
Richard Haarman of the Netherlands’ border police confirmed that the body was found in the KLM plane, adding that the incident is under investigation.
A photo published on the website of Noordhollands Dagblad newspaper showed the Embraer 190 on the tarmac with white sheets shielding its midsection from view and a coroner’s car nearby. The plane’s call letters were PH-EZC — which are those of the jet linked to KLM flight 1212 that departed from Sandefjord-Torp airport near Oslo early Thursday.
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FLASHBACK FLIGHT:
"Plane stowaway OK, but trip raises security concerns" | Associated Press April 22, 2014
SAN JOSE, Calif. — A 16-year-old boy scrambled over an airport fence, crossed a tarmac, and climbed into a jetliner’s wheel well, then flew for five freezing hours to Hawaii — a misadventure that stirred concern about possible weak spots in the security system that protects the nation’s airline fleet.
So what false flag is in the works?
The boy, who lives in Santa Clara, Calif., and attends a local high school, hopped out of the wheel well of a Boeing 767 on the Maui airport tarmac Sunday. Authorities found him wandering around the airport grounds with no identification. He was questioned by the FBI and taken by ambulance to a hospital, where he was found to be unharmed.
FBI spokesman Tom Simon in Honolulu said the teen did not remember the flight from San Jose. It was not immediately clear how the boy stayed alive in the unpressurized space, where temperatures at cruising altitude can fall well below zero and the air is too thin for humans to stay conscious. An FAA study of stowaways found that some went into a hibernation-like state.
Yeah, this story really stinks like some others.
Could they be planted stories so outrageous to suggest that the every day lies simply must be true?
Somehow, the boy managed to slip through multiple layers of security, including wide-ranging video surveillance, German shepherds, and Segway-riding police officers.
Yeah, somehow.
Security footage from the San Jose airport verified that the boy climbed a fence and crossed a runway to get to Hawaiian Airlines Flight 45 on Sunday morning, Simon said.
The airport, in the heart of Silicon Valley, is surrounded by fences, although many sections do not have barbed wire and could easily be scaled.
The boy climbed over during the night, ‘‘under the cover of darkness,’’ San Jose airport spokeswoman Rosemary Barnes said Monday.
Airport police were working with the FBI and the Transportation Security Administration to review security.
The boy was released to child protective services in Hawaii and not charged with a crime, Simon said.
Who does his family know?
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Time to stow this post away.