LOS ANGELES - An airplane passenger holding a shoe struck a flight attendant and opened the plane's rear door, disrupting a Southwest Airlines flight about to take off for Las Vegas, authorities said. <br>
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``His words were that everybody on the plane was going to hell,'' passenger Michael Fitzhugh said. ``You could see the panic of the passengers.'' <br>
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Police at Los Angeles International Airport arrested David Boone, 36, of New Orleans, on Monday for investigation of interfering with a flight crew. He was jailed without bail pending a federal court appearance Tuesday. <br>
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Also Monday, security screeners at Chicago's Midway Airport discovered four pocket knives, a box cutter, two flares and a bottle of lighter fluid in a 20-year-old man's carry-on bag, police said. The man, whose identity was not released, was turned over to federal officials. <br>
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``The FBI is interviewing him,'' said Officer Ozzie Rodriguez, a Chicago police department spokesman. ``If he's not charged with anything federal, we'll take over, but for the time being, it's in the FBI's hands.'' <br>
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FBI officials would not comment early Tuesday on the arrest. Police said they did not know why the man, from Marshalltown, Iowa, had the items in his bag. <br>
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In California, authorities said the 6-foot-2, 210-pound Boone stood up on the Los Angeles-to-Las Vegas flight as the Boeing 737 was pulling away from the terminal Monday afternoon. <br>
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``He approached the rear of the aircraft with a shoe in his hand and as a flight attendant tried to prevent him from opening the rear door, he hit her in the head with his fist,'' FBI spokesman Matthew McLaughlin said. <br>
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The attendant was treated for minor injuries. No one else was hurt. <br>
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Boone then allegedly opened the door, but surrendered when two male passengers moved to subdue him. He was believed to have been drinking. <br>
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The shoe contained no trace of explosives, authorities said. <br>
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Last month, Richard Reid, 28, allegedly tried to blow up an American Airlines Paris-to-Miami flight with explosives hidden in his shoes. He was overpowered by flight attendants and passengers. <br>
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As many as 10 of the 137 passengers on Monday's Flight 1702 decided not to continue with the flight, Southwest spokeswoman Christine Turneabe-Connelly said from Dallas. Two pilots and three flight attendants also were aboard. <br>
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