‘I've got a bomb!': Man threatens Trump before hero passengers tackle him on flight
Harrowing footage filmed inside EasyJet flight 609 showed the moment the suspect, who has only been identified as a 41-year-old man, began shouting, 'Allahu Akbar!' and making threats at Mr Trump, who was just an hour away at his Turnberry golf course.
'I'm going to bomb the plane! Death to America! Death to Trump!' the man yelled before he was quickly tackled to the ground by fellow passengers.
The incident happened around 8am local time on Sunday, just an hour after the plane took off from London's Luton Airport, with the suspect shouting his threats after coming out of the bathroom, a witness told The Sun.
'At that point, one guy managed to grab him from behind and pull him down, then everyone jumped on top of him,' the passenger said.
'He was fighting a bit on the floor, but at this point, he knew he'd f — ked up.'
The men holding the suspect in place could be seen then interrogating him, with several passengers slamming him as an 'idiot' for threatening innocent people in a stunt directed toward Mr Trump.
The hero passengers were able to keep the man in place until the jet landed and police and airport officials confirmed there were no explosives on board as they took the suspect into custody.
As authorities walked the suspect down the aisle, he could be heard asking about his missing phone and wallet, prompting a passenger to yell, 'F – k off!' with the plane bursting into laughter.
Scotland police said the case remains under investigation, with officials noting that the man appeared to act alone with no greater threat to the public.
EasyJet confirmed that a suspect had been arrested by police after the emergency landing.
'Flight EZY609 from Luton to Glasgow this morning was met by police on arrival in Glasgow, where they boarded the aircraft and removed a passenger due to their behaviour onboard,' the company said in a statement.
'The safety and wellbeing of our customers and crew is always easyJet's highest priority,' the company added.

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SBS Australia
an hour ago
- SBS Australia
Evening News Bulletin 2 August 2025
Listen to Australian and world news, and follow trending topics with SBS News Podcasts . TRANSCRIPT: A woman stabbed to death in rural Victoria; Donald Trump's name removed from an impeachment exhibit at a museum in the US; Australia's Sarah Gigante keeping pace with the leaders of the Tour de France Femmes. A man is being interviewed by police after the stabbing death of a woman in regional Victoria. Police say the man they arrested was known to the woman. Officers had been called to a home in Coleraine, in regional Victoria, about 340 kilometres west of Melbourne just after 1am this morning following reports a woman had been attacked. A worker has been killed and five others remain trapped underground after a collapse at a copper mine in Chile. The collapse is understood to be the result of an earthquake that trapped the miners as they worked on the Andesita project, a new 25 kilometre tunnel complex extending from the El Teniente mine on the western slopes of the Andes Mountains. The US Geological Survey reported a magnitude 5.0 earthquake in an area of central Chile where the mine is located. But authorities are yet to determine if it was a naturally occurring earthquake or whether it was caused by mining activity. A US museum has removed Donald Trump's name from an impeachment exhibit in Washington DC. The Washington Post says the exhibit at the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History now has a label that notes that only three presidents have seriously faced removal: Andrew Johnson in 1868; Bill Clinton in 1998, and Richard Nixon, who would have faced impeachment had he not resigned in 1974. Trump was impeached twice in his first term in office. New South Wales Police say they will respect a court decision to allow a pro Palestinian protest to take place on the Harbour Bridge on Sunday. The Force had previously argued that the rally would cause disruption on the bridge, an argument rejected by Supreme Court Justice Belinda Rigg who ruled those arguments were not sufficient to bar the demonstration. Acting deputy commissioner Peter McKenna says they will be working with the protest organisers to ensure it goes ahead smoothly. "Nothing changes for us in the fact that people who come in to do the right thing and have a safe protest, then we will facilitate that. We will work with them. But if people come in to commit any type of offences, anti-social behaviour or anything else that puts the public safety at risk, then we will have no hesitation to take action. So nothing has changed in that space." A handful of Labor Party members have staged a silent protest at the Victorian party's conference. They've held up images of Palestinian flags on their devices as Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles delivered a speech to the group, which centred largely around thanking Labor members for their efforts to secure the party's thumping federal election win. "This is the largest number of seats that we have ever won at a federal election. (claps) Proportionally, it is the single biggest defeat of Australia's conservative movement ever." While passed motions do not bind governments or the federal party, votes by rank-and-file members are set for this afternoon on the AUKUS defence agreement and Middle East. Labor's official platform backs Palestinian statehood but Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has not set a timeline for implementing the policy and recently declared it not imminent. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has unveiled a new economic partnership between the federal government and Indigenous organisation the Coalition of Peaks at the Garma festival in north-east Arnhem land. The PM has called the Partnership an example of the government's commitment to the Priority Reforms of the National Agreement on Closing the Gap. "We must end the stalemate that arises when native title organisations with little in the way back of us, or legal or commercial expertise, are expected to negotiate with multinational companies. This is why the first priority for our economic partnership will be to reform the funding model for prescribed body corporate. So that it delivers meaningful participation for communities and timely decision making for investors." Data released on Thursday revealed just four of 19 targets are on track to be met. Another four goals are going backwards - namely adult incarceration, children in out-of-home care, suicide rates and child development. Australia's Sarah Gigante has kept pace with the Tour de France Femmes leaders, despite France's Maeva Squiban claiming a solo victory in the seventh stage. Gigante has come home in 16th place for the second day running, 1 minute and 11 seconds behind the winner. The result means the AG Insurance-Soudal rider has slipped a place to eighth in the general classification, 1 min 14 sec behind yellow jersey wearer Kimberley Le Court Pienaar. But she says she has a game plan and is sticking to it. "I know they're going to put me under pressure on purpose. So it's hard but yeah, I know what's coming."

ABC News
a day ago
- ABC News
Epstein accuser Giuffre's family urges Trump to keep Maxwell in prison
The family of deceased Jeffrey Epstein accuser Virginia Giuffre is urging US President Donald Trump not to grant clemency to Ghislaine Maxwell, the British socialite serving a 20-year prison sentence for helping Epstein abuse underage girls. Ms Giuffre's family also said it was "shocking" to hear Mr Trump say this week that Epstein had poached Mr Giuffre from the Mar-a-Lago club, where she worked at the spa in 2000. The family said Mr Trump's comment raised questions about whether he was aware of Mr Epstein's sexual abuse at the time. Mr Trump has not been accused of wrongdoing. Ms Giuffre said she was a victim of Epstein's sex trafficking from 2000 to 2002, starting when she was 16. She died by suicide in April at age 41. The family's statement comes as Mr Trump has faced pressure to make public documents from the federal investigations into Epstein, who died by suicide in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges, and his longtime girlfriend Maxwell, who was convicted of sex trafficking in 2021. Deputy US Attorney-General Todd Blanche, Mr Trump's former personal lawyer, last week met with Maxwell. Maxwell's lawyer David Markus has called on Mr Trump to grant her relief, but Mr Trump has said he has not thought about whether to pardon her. A senior Trump administration official said no leniency for Maxwell was being given or discussed. "That's just false," the official said. Mr Markus did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Mr Trump and Epstein socialised in the 1990s and 2000s, before what Mr Trump has called a falling out. Speaking to reporters on Air Force One on Tuesday, Mr Trump said he told Epstein to "stay the hell out" of Mar-a-Lago after finding out Epstein was poaching Mr Trump's workers, including Ms Giuffre. "He stole her," Mr Trump said. In their statement, Ms Giuffre's family said Maxwell recruited her from Mar-a-Lago in 2000. The family said that was years before Epstein and Mr Trump had their falling out, pointing to a 2002 New York magazine article in which the president was quoted calling Epstein a "terrific guy" who liked women "on the younger side". "It makes us ask if he was aware of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell's criminal actions," Ms Giuffre's family said, referring to Mr Trump's Air Force One comments. Asked by a reporter on Thursday if he knew why Epstein was taking his employees, Mr Trump said he did not. "I didn't really know really why, but I said if he's taking anybody from Mar-a-Lago, if he's hiring or whatever he's doing, I didn't like it and we threw him out," Mr Trump said. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement earlier on Thursday that Mr Trump had been responding to a reporter's question about Ms Giuffre and did not bring her up. "President Trump kicked Jeffrey Epstein out of his club for being a creep to his female employees," Ms Leavitt said. At Maxwell's trial in 2021, Juan Alessi, the former manager of Epstein's Palm Beach home, testified that he drove with Maxwell to meet Ms Giuffre at nearby Mar-a-Lago. He said he then saw Ms Giuffre at Epstein's home for the first time that evening, and saw her at the home many times thereafter. Reuters

ABC News
2 days ago
- ABC News
Will Trump set Ghislaine Maxwell free?
Sam Hawley: Donald Trump has spent another week fielding questions over the release of the so-called Epstein files. The saga even followed him to Scotland. So what's he up to now to try and get rid of the problem? Well, in part, he sent his Deputy Attorney General to interview Epstein's co-conspirator, Delaine Maxwell, who's in prison for sex trafficking. Today, Jill Wine-Banks, who was one of the prosecutors during the Watergate scandal, on whether Trump could pardon Maxwell and whether that would help him. I'm Sam Hawley on Gadigal land in Sydney. This is ABC News Daily. Jill, this Epstein issue, it won't go away for Donald Trump. He was even facing questioning about this during his trip to Scotland. Donald Trump, US President: You're making a very big thing over something that's not a big thing. You should be talking about, if you're going to talk about that, talk about Clinton. Talk about the former president of Harvard. Don't talk about Trump. Sam Hawley: It's become rather a bother, hasn't it? Jill Wine-Banks: It is something that is a self-inflicted problem because it was Donald Trump who yelled, conspiracy, conspiracy, you must release all this. And he promised he would. And now he's not. We know that his attorney general told him that he is in the Jeffrey Epstein files, and that would seem very suspicious as to why he is now not releasing it and looking for ways around it. Sam Hawley: Well, Jill, in some of his latest comments, Donald Trump says he fell out with Jeffrey Epstein because he stole young women from his Mar-a-Lago club, including Australian Virginia Jeffrey, who died this year. Donald Trump, US President: I think so. I think that was one of the people. He stole her. And by the way, she had no complaints about us, as you know. Sam Hawley: And he says he never went to Epstein's private island in the Caribbean. Donald Trump, US President: I never had the privilege of going to his island. And I did turn it down, but a lot of people in Palm Beach were invited to his island. And one of my very good moments, I turned it down. I didn't want to go to his island. Sam Hawley: But look, what I really want to do with you is to dig a bit deeper into the role of it?in all of this, because she has, of course, been re-interviewed by the deputy attorney general, presumably at Trump's orders. Just remind me, first of all, who she is and why she's serving a 20-year jail sentence in America. Jill Wine-Banks: Absolutely. So Ghislaine Maxwell is an accomplice to Jeffrey Epstein. She is not charged with his crimes. She is charged with basically procuring young girls, grooming them, and participating in sexual abuse of them. So it's not just that she was what we would call in America his pimp, where she went to colleges and other places to find young girls who would come to his Palm Beach estate. And then she groomed them as to how to handle the sexual acts and the massages, as they were called. She was convicted in 2021, sentenced in 2022, and is currently imprisoned. She is appealing. She has asked the Supreme Court to review her conviction. They are on their summer recess, but are expected to decide whether they will take the case this fall when they come back into session. Sam Hawley: All right. So between 1994 and 2004, according to federal prosecutors, Maxwell helped Epstein groom and traffic girls as young as 14. Yes. She has maintained her innocence, of course, hence the appeal. Just a reminder, she's the only one serving time in relation to these awful offenses against young girls because Jeffrey Epstein died in jail in 2019. Jill Wine-Banks: Correct. He was serving time in jail and died. The question was whether he committed suicide or was murdered, and that remains an open question. There can be no further criminal prosecutions because there's no trafficking subsequent to his death. And he died in 2019, and we have a statute of limitations in America that is five years, and it's six years since he died. Sam Hawley: All right. So, Jill, Ghislaine Maxwell is serving a 20-year sentence in a Florida prison, but in the past week, the Deputy Attorney General, Todd Blanche, has gone knocking on her prison cell door. Just tell me about that. What's happened? Jill Wine-Banks: Yes. Well, first, let me say how utterly remarkable it is that the Deputy Attorney General would interview a witness. Let me say how remarkable it is that the Deputy Attorney General would be the former private attorney of Donald Trump. Once you are someone's private attorney, you have a duty of loyalty and secrecy to that client forever. And so he cannot be acting on behalf of the American people when he already has a commitment to Donald Trump. That would be a conflict of interest. The other reason it's unusual is that he knows nothing about the prosecution. He has no experience in this case. The people who tried the Epstein and Maxwell cases are people who would be very appropriate to interview her, not someone with no experience. And Maxwell, we should be also adding, she's not a credible person that a jury would be likely to rely on. And we do not in America allow the revelation of secret grand jury testimony or anything else that would accuse someone of a crime unless you're charging them with a crime. And nothing, she says, is going to lead to a criminal prosecution. We don't release information because it would satisfy public interest or purient interest of the public. It has to be in connection with a judicial proceeding. And that's another reason why it would be wrong. Sam Hawley: All right, well, Maxwell's lawyer, David Oscar Marcus, said that she answered every single question she was asked. David Markus, Ghislaine Maxwell's attorney: There were a lot of questions and we went all day and she answered every one of them. She never just said, I'm not going to answer, never declined. You know, this is the first time the government has asked questions. So we were thankful that. Sam Hawley: She was offered limited immunity for participating in this interview. Just explain what that is. Jill Wine-Banks: Limited immunity is basically also called use immunity. It means that anything that she says cannot be used against her and that in any future prosecution, anything that is introduced in evidence against her would have to be shown to not be the result of something she said. That's considered fruit of the poison tree. So it gives her some protection and it is a completely legitimate thing to do. So that is not among the suspicious or wrong things that the Department of Justice is doing. The interview is the wrong thing. And although they are now saying that there are transcripts of it, I want to know who the person taking the notes was. And I want to know whether 100% of from hello until walking out on the second day, how much was maybe done what we call in camera, in secret, not as part of the recorded testimony. Because there is my suspicion shared by many that part of Todd Blanche's purpose in talking to her was to say, well, the president would certainly look favorably on your request for a pardon if you could say that he had nothing to do with this. And maybe in a more subtle way than I'm phrasing it, shape her testimony so that it was helpful to Donald Trump and hurtful to Democrats who might be on the list of people who she has evidence against. We've obviously heard the name Bill Clinton, former president Bill Clinton, as someone who might be involved in this. There's no evidence that there is. And being on the manifest for planes does not mean you committed a crime. It means you took a plane somewhere that Jeffrey Epstein flew you. It doesn't mean you engaged in trafficking or in illegal sex with a minor. Sam Hawley: President Trump was asked whether he would pardon Maxwell. And he really hasn't closed the door on that. Donald Trump, US President: Would you consider a pardon or a commutation for Ghislaine Maxwell? It's something I haven't thought about. I'm allowed to do it, but it's something I have not thought about. Sam Hawley: But would anyone believe, the public believe what she had to say, whatever that might be? Jill Wine-Banks: I think they would not believe what she had to say. I think they would believe that any pardon was to protect himself. And he said about her, I wish her well. He has not said anything of sympathy toward any of the victims. He should be concerned about the young girls, as you said, starting at the age of 14. Sam Hawley: Well, Jill, the President and the Department of Justice want to quell this criticism that they're hiding something, that they're hiding a list of Epstein's high profile clients. But is this all just the art of distraction, if you like? And is it working? Jill Wine-Banks: Well, he's trying to distract by doing a lot of other things and saying, well, look at Obama. He's a traitor. He should be arrested for treason and a million other things that he is trying to distract the public from. For some reason, the Epstein files have captured the hearts and minds of many in America. And the distraction doesn't seem to be working. People are not giving up on this. As you said, it's overseas. The headlines in the Scottish papers were really harsh on him. And he's now the subject of cartoons. The South Park TV cartoon series has made fun of him. And people are now starting to think that this could really be the thing that takes him down. Sam Hawley: You seem to be saying that you don't think he can wiggle his way out of this, but he's done it so many times with so many controversies, hasn't he? Jill Wine-Banks: He has. I mean, I'm one who thought in his first campaign when the tape of him saying, I grab women's private parts and I can get away with it because when you're a star, you can do it. I thought that was the end of his campaign. I've thought a million other things were the end of his campaign or his career. And I was wrong. He has been a very lucky person to escape the responsibility for his bad acts. So I can't say for sure that he isn't going to get away with this, but he may lose his power if this continues. And if things aren't released, his supporters who believed he was going to do it are not going to forgive him for that. That's going to hurt the Republican Party, not just him. Sam Hawley: And what about Ghislaine Maxwell? What are the chances in your view that Trump will simply let her out of jail? A move that would be simply devastating for Epstein's victims and hers. Jill Wine-Banks: I don't think we can rule it out because I don't think he has empathy for any of the victims. I think he could commute her sentence to time served and let her out of jail without pardoning her for these horrendous crimes. I think, I don't know, I may be Pollyanna, but I still think that there has to be someone advising him who says you cannot pardon these kinds of crimes for which there was more than ample evidence. And yet he thinks he can get away with anything. He, of course, can pardon her and there's no consequences. That's totally up to his discretion. Sam Hawley: Jill Wine-Banks was one of the prosecutors during the Watergate scandal. She's the author of The Watergate Girl and the host of the podcast, #Sisters In Law. This episode was produced by Sydney Pead. Audio production by Sam Dunn. Our supervising producer is David Coady. I'm Sam Hawley. ABC News Daily will be back again on Monday. Thanks for listening.