Woman admits charges over mid-flight plane door incident
Version 0 of 1. Chloe Haines will be sentenced in January after admitting endangering aircraft’s safety A woman who allegedly tried to open the door of a passenger plane midway through a flight from the UK to Turkey has admitted endangering the safety of an aircraft. Chloe Haines, 26, of High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, caused the Jet2 flight to be diverted back to Stansted airport on 22 June. She appeared before Chelmsford crown court on Monday where she pleaded guilty to endangering the safety of an aircraft and to assaulting a cabin crew member, Charley Coombe. Haines denied a charge of drunkenness on an aircraft. The barrister Oliver Saxby, defending Haines, said there was “no question that she was drunk” but said the charge of endangering the safety of an aircraft was the “more serious alternative”. Haines was bailed to return to the court on 24 January for sentencing. Saxby told the court: “On any analysis, she’s a troubled young person with a number of serious issues. Seventeen days before this incident she had been sentenced to a community order for not dissimilar offences, not committed in the air but with alcohol and a loss of control. That order had not had a chance to bite.” He said she had “to her credit engaged more fully with Alcoholics Anonymous”. Saxby asked for a pre-sentence report to be prepared about the defendant, giving the judge “more information on her current situation, this offence having happened some six months or so ago.” Two RAF fighter jets were scrambled to meet the plane, which had been heading to Dalaman, and escort it back to Stansted, where Haines was arrested by Essex police. Onboard the flight, a cabin crew member allegedly sustained scratches as she tried to prevent Haines from opening the plane door. The judge Charles Gratwicke warned Haines that all sentencing options remained open. Her bail conditions include that she does not travel from any UK airport. |