ALERT: Germany- Axe Attack at Duesseldorf’s Primary Train Station (March 9, 2017)

March 9, 2017

On Thursday evening (German time), an unspecified number of individuals attacked and injured at least five people by axe. Two suspects have been arrested, while others are “on the run.”

According to the Associated Press:

German police say several people have been injured in an axe attack at Duesseldorf’s main train station.

A spokesman for federal police says two suspected attackers were arrested after the attack that took place at about 9 p.m. Thursday.

Police spokesman Rainer Kerstiens told The Associated Press that more suspected attackers are believed to be on the run.

Kerstiens says the number of people injured was around five. He was unable to say how serious their injuries were.

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ALERT: North Dakota- Amtrak train freed after 13 hours stuck in snow bank (March 9, 2017)

March 9, 2017

An Amtrak train carrying 111 passengers got stuck in a 25-foot-high by 200-foot-long snowbank in Rugby, North Dakota on Wednesday and was finally freed 13 hours later.

According to CBS Fargo, North Dakota affiliate KXJB-TV:

The St. Paul and Chicago-bound Amtrak’s Empire Building was delayed in Minot and got stuck about five miles west of Rugby, in north-central North Dakota. Crews failed three times to dislodge the train before succeeding at about 6:45 p.m. A passenger on the train told KXJB-TV that workers had to use bulldozers and shovel by hand to dig the train out.

In a statement, Amtrak said:

“We appreciate the offers of assistance from emergency responders in North Dakota, but our customers (111 eastbound and 96 westbound) stayed aboard the train and were kept comfortable by our Amtrak staff.”

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ALERT: France- Air Traffic Control Strike (March 6, 2017)

March 6, 2017

Alert – France: Air Traffic Control Strike

A week-long air traffic control strike in France is impacting flights. Major airlines including Air France, American Airlines, British Airways, Delta Air Lines, and United Airlines have instituted travel waivers.

Air France’s website states:

Following the call for strike action issued by a union for French air traffic controllers from Monday 6 to Friday 10 March 2017, the French Civil Aviation Authority (DGAC) has asked airlines to reduce their flight schedule between west and south of France, the Iberian Peninsula, Italy and North Africa.

Our flight schedule will be disrupted all week.

According to the UK’s Guardian:

Flights to and from the UK are among more than 1,000 likely to be scrapped this week.

With a separate strike by Air France workers on Tuesday, carriers have been asked to slash their services by 25%.

Flights to France as well as those crossing its airspace are affected, including UK flights to and from Italy, Switzerland and Spain. Brest and Bordeaux control centres are striking until 7pm on Friday, with the action in the south of France running from 5am on Tuesday until 5am on Friday.

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ALERT: United States- TSA Security Pat-downs to Become More “Comprehensive” (March 4, 2017)

March 4, 2017

Alert – United States: TSA Security Pat-downs to Become More “Comprehensive”

In a news report from Bloomberg, a U.S. Transportation Security Administration (TSA) spokesman confirms that for those individuals requiring secondary screening at U.S. airports, they will be subject to more “comprehensive” physical screening that Bloomberg describes as more “invasive.”

Bloomberg reports:

While few have noticed, U.S. airport security workers long had the option of using five different types of physical pat-downs at the screening line. Now those options have been eliminated and replaced with a single universal approach. This time, you will notice.

The new physical touching—for those selected to have a pat-down—will be be what the federal agency officially describes as a more “comprehensive” physical screening, according to a Transportation Security Administration spokesman.

Denver International Airport, for example, notified employees and flight crews on Thursday that the “more rigorous” searches “will be more thorough and may involve an officer making more intimate contact than before.”

“I would say people who in the past would have gotten a pat-down that wasn’t involved will notice that the [new] pat-down is more involved,” TSA spokesman Bruce Anderson said Friday. The shift from the previous, risk-based assessment on which pat-down procedure an officer should apply was phased in over the past two weeks after tests at smaller airports, he said.

The TSA screens about 2 million people daily at U.S. airports. The agency doesn’t track how many passengers are subject to pat-down searches after they pass through an imaging scanner. People who decline to use this screening technology are automatically subject to physical searches.

While passengers may find the process more intrusive, the new screening procedure isn’t expected to increase overall airport security delays. However, “for the person who gets the pat down, it will slow them down,” Anderson said.

The change is partly a result of the agency’s study of a 2015 report that criticized aspects of TSA screening procedures. That audit, by the Department of Homeland Security’s Inspector General, drew headlines because airport officers had failed to detect handguns and other weapons. An additional change prompted by the report was the TSA’s decision to end its “managed inclusion” program, by which some everyday travelers were allowed to use PreCheck lanes to speed things up at peak times.

Physical screening has long been one of the traveling public’s strongest dislikes regarding airport security protocols. The TSA has all pat-downs conducted by an officer of the same sex as the traveler, and allows a passenger to request a private area for the screening, as well as to have a witness present. Likewise, the traveler can request that the pat-down occur in public view.

The new policy also applies to airline pilots and flight attendants, classified as “known crewmembers” who generally receive less scrutiny at checkpoints. The TSA conducts occasional random searches of these employees, and airlines this week inquired as to whether their employees would be subject to Travel Leaders • 3033 Campus Drive Ste W320 • Plymouth, MN 55441

more frequent pat-downs. The number of random searches for airline crews isn’t changing and will remain a “very small percentage” of the total, Anderson said. But airport employees may face more random checks.

The random searches also vary by airport, depending on the screening program, Anderson said. “Sometimes it’s random, sometimes they’re consistent, based on the door you enter,” he said of the searches given workers with airport ID badges. “Sometimes, those measures call for a pat-down.”

In their notice, Denver airport officials said employees are subject to search at random locations: “If a pat down is required as part of the operation, badged employees will be required to comply with a TSA officer’s request to conduct a full body pat down.”

In December, a CNN political commentator, Angela Rye, posted an article online describing her “humiliation” during a TSA agent’s search. Rye wrote in graphic detail about the pat down of her genitals during a search at the Detroit Airport before a flight to New York. TSA officials didn’t immediately address whether the new universal pat-down protocol will mandate touching of passenger genitals.

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ALERT: European Union- Parliament Passes NON-BINDING Resolution to Introduce Visa for US Travelers (March 2, 2017)

March 2, 2017

Earlier today, the European Union (EU) Parliament passed a non-binding resolution that would introduce visas for US citizens wishing to travel throughout the EU.

However, in order for the visa requirement to move forward, EU member states would have to approve the move, which would likely take years. The vote was in response to US rules requiring citizens of Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Poland and Romania to have visas in order to enter the United States.

According to BBC:

US citizens should be refused visa-free access to the EU in response to American visa rules affecting citizens from five EU countries, the European Parliament has said.

Citizens of Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Poland and Romania are currently denied visa-free access to the US.

The European Parliament passed a non-binding resolution on Thursday. However, member states would have to approve the move, a process that could take years.

Nevertheless, the resolution, passed by a show of hands, said the new visa rules should come into effect quickly and should remain in place until the US visa requirements were shelved.

Under these rules, “if a third country does not lift its visa requirements within 24 months of being notified of non-reciprocity, the EU Commission must adopt a delegated act… suspending the visa waiver for its nationals for 12 months”, the statement said.

It said a notification of non-reciprocity was first received in April 2014 – meaning the Commission should have taken action in April 2016 – but so far it has yet to do so.

Canada also has visa requirements for Bulgarian and Romanian citizens, the statement said, but it has announced that these will be shelved in December.

In January, President Donald Trump attempted to introduce a travel ban on people from seven mainly Muslim nations but it was blocked in the courts. He is working on a new executive order.

 

ALERT: Vancouver- Protests Schedules Outside New Trump Hotel (February 28, 2017)

 

February 23, 2017

A grand opening for the newest Trump International Hotel is taking place today in Vancouver. Protests were scheduled for this morning and this afternoon, and Vancouver police warned “traffic disruptions are anticipated today in the area of the 1100 block of W. Georgia Street.”

The Trump hotel is in very close proximity to the Shangri-La Hotel Vancouver and the Fairmont Hotel Vancouver. The latter two are part of Travel Leaders Group’s Select Hotels and Resorts.

According to the Vancouver Sun:

U.S. president Donald Trump’s son Eric and Donald Jr. were greeted by protesters this morning as they arrived in Vancouver to officially open the 69-storey Trump International Hotel and Tower on West Georgia Street.

Dozens of police and security guards surround the Trump Tower, while the Trumps are travelling with a U.S. Secret Service detail.

According to CBC:

Over 100 people have gathered outside the Trump Tower on West Georgia Street in Vancouver to protest the grand opening of the luxury hotel Tuesday morning.

The sons of U.S. President Donald Trump — Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump — were on hand for the official ribbon cutting set.

A separate “resist4peace” rally and march is scheduled to begin at Jack Poole Plaza at 4 p.m.

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ALERT: New Orleans- Alleged Drunk Driver Plows into Mardi Gras Parade Crowd Injuring at Least 21 (February 26, 2017)

February 26, 2017

New Orleans: Alleged Drunk Driver Plows into Mardi Gras Parade Crowd Injuring at Least 21

Earlier this evening, a pickup truck plowed into a crowd at the Krewe of Endymion Mardi Gras parade in New Orleans near the intersection of Orleans and Carrollton. At least 21 were injured including five seriously, although official say none of the injuries are life-threatening. The suspect was “likely highly intoxicated.”

According to CNN:

One man is in custody after an accident at a Mardi Gras parade in New Orleans injured at least 21 people, five seriously, officials said. Police Chief Michael Harrison said it appeared the suspect, who was driving a pickup truck that hit two cars before running into the crowd, was likely highly intoxicated. None of the injuries was life-threatening, officials said.

The source said, “It appears to be a drunk driver,” and added there were no preliminary indications that it was a terrorism-related incident.

The incident occurred near the intersection of Orleans and Carrollton Avenues where the Krewe of Endymion parade was underway. Video from CNN affiliate WDSU showed a gray pickup truck that had run into a dump truck near the intersection.

Witnesses told the station that the pickup came down one of the streets and struck several cars before hitting people in the crowd watching the parade.

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ALERT: Flybe FLight BE 1284 (EDI to AMS) Crash Lands at Amsterdam Schipol (February 23, 2017)

February 23, 2017

A Flybe Airlines Bombardier Q400 aircraft (Flight 1284 from Edinburgh) crash landed at Amsterdam’s Schipol Airport. No injuries were reported.

According to The Independent in the UK:

A Flybe passenger plane crash landed at Amsterdam’s Schipol airport after part of the aircraft’s undercarriage “collapsed” as it touched down in bad weather.

Footage filmed by passengers showed the Bombardier Q400’s right wing dipping sharply as it came into land in high winds.

Flight 1284 from Edinburgh to Amsterdam had already been affected by the poor weather created by Storm Doris and had suffered a delay of 90 minutes to its scheduled take off time.

The aircraft came to a halt on the side of the runway after the incident and emergency services attended. No one was injured.

A spokesperson for the airline told The Independent: “”Flybe can confirm that there has been an incident involving one of our aircraft, flight no BE1284.

“The aircraft departed from Edinburgh at 1410 local time bound for Amsterdam. The incident occurred at Amsterdam Schiphol Airport at approximately 1659 local time.

“We can confirm that there are no injuries and all passengers have been bussed to the airport terminal. Our primary concern is for the welfare of the passengers and crew.”

It came just hours after Flybe flight 783 from Glasgow to Birmingham made an emergency landing after the pilot was forced to shut down one of its engines mid-air due to a technical fault.

The airline said the plane suffered “a technical fault that resulted in the captain electing to shut down the number one engine as a safety precaution.”

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ALERT: Delta Air Lines Flight 1583 (SFO to JFK) Met by CPB Checking IDS of All Disembarking Passengers (February 23, 2017)

February 23, 2017

On Wednesday evening, Delta flight 1583 from San Francisco to JFK was met by Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agents who checked the IDs of all passenger onboard.

According to the Gothamist:

The incident, which took place on Delta Flight 1583 from San Francisco, was atypical for both domestic flights—on which no identification is needed to exit the airport—and international flights, where identification is checked during a customs screening after deplaning.

Delta spokeswoman Elizabeth Wolf did not immediately comment on the incident.

According to a CBP spokesman, the agency “was contacted by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) yesterday, February 22, 2017, to assist in locating an individual possibly aboard Delta flight 1583 from San Francisco International Airport to JFK. This individual was ordered removed by an immigration judge.”

“To assist our law enforcement partners, two CBP officers requested identification from those on the flight in order to help identify the individual,” he added. “The individual was determined not to be on the flight.”

Earlier this week, the Department of Homeland Security issued guidelines for CBP and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to implement President Donald Trump’s immigration policy. The guidelines basically eliminate the concept of deportation priorities, leaving it up to ICE offices to decide who among the millions in the United States without a visa to go after.

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ALERT: New York- JFK Airport Security Breached on Monday (February 21, 2017)

February 21, 2017

Alert – New York: JFK Airport Security Breached on Monday

Yesterday at New York JFK Airport, as many as 11 people were able to pass through an unattended TSA

checkpoint at 6 a.m. Local authorities are at odds over what occurred. New York Daily News reports that the

breach happened at the JetBlue terminal (Terminal 5).

According to CNN:

A security incident at New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport on Monday has

federal and local authorities at odds over what happened. The Port Authority says that

11 people went through an unattended TSA PreCheck security checkpoint at the airport

around 6 a.m. Monday.

The TSA alerted Port Authority about the lapse roughly two hours later, according to Joe

Pentangelo, the senior police public information officer at the Port Authority of New

York and New Jersey. By that time though, they could not find the 11 people as the

“travelers in question boarded various flights,” Pentangelo said in a statement.

Port Authority police identified three of the passengers who went through the

unattended checkpoint through video and sought to identify the remaining eight.

Meanwhile, the TSA called the incident a “possible security incident” and said it had

affected just three passengers.

Out of the 11 people walking through the unattended checkpoint, three of them set off

the metal detector, reported CNN’s affiliates WCBS and WABC.

The TSA said in a statement: “Early reports indicate 3 passengers did not receive

required secondary screening after alarming the walk through metal detector. All

personal carry-on bags received required screening. A K9 team was present at the

checkpoint at the time of the incident.”

A TSA official said it had been determined that the measures taken concerning the three

passengers were “all that was necessary.”

“TSA works with a network of security layers both seen and unseen. We are confident

this incident presents minimal risk to the aviation transportation system,” the agency

stated on Monday.

The TSA said it would “take appropriate action” once a review was complete.

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