Marine says he tackled 'unruly' man accused of trying to open exit door on international flight
Armentrout, a sergeant major who has served in the Marines for over 20 years and is based in Japan, has been trained to be vigilant. He said he saw the man take his backpack to one of the bathrooms, then come out and go to another bathroom and then, another bathroom.
"He came out of that one and began pacing up and down the aisle, so that just threw my radar on," Armentrout, 50, said in a phone interview.
But then, Armentrout said, he saw the man eyeing up the emergency exit right next to him. Armentrout said he stood up, putting himself between the man and the exit door.
That's when the man turned around, ran through the plane's galley and darted to the exit door on the opposite side, Armentrout said. He knew he had seconds to act.
"He grabbed a strap around the door, pulled it off, and about that time is when I took him and slammed him, put him on the ground," Armentrout said. "And then there was an older gentleman sitting on that side that woke up, and he got up and kind of helped me."
Armentrout said flight attendants handed him zip ties, which he placed around the man's wrists and used to secure him to a seat. It was announced that the plane would be diverted to Seattle as a result of the incident, and Armentrout said he sat next to the man until they landed at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport.
"His eyes — you could definitely tell there was something going on," Armentrout said.
All Nippon Airways Flight 114 departed from Haneda Airport on Saturday morning and was heading to Houston's George Bush Intercontinental Airport when a passenger became 'unruly,' the airline said. Port of Seattle police told NBC News that the passenger was trying to open exit doors during the flight.
Police confirmed that passengers and flight crew members restrained the man, who has not been identified.
The flight landed at Seattle at 4:19 a.m. PT, and the man was taken off the plane, police said. He was evaluated, and it was determined he was 'having a medical crisis," police said. The man was later taken to a local hospital.
Armentrout said he acted out of concern for his fellow passengers, especially multiple babies.
"I just knew he was up to something crazy, and at the end of the day, I was willing to take the risk of him saying 'I'm not doing anything' and then just them making him go sit back down than me allowing him to do anything that's going to put anybody at risk," Armentrout said.
Other passengers took the time to thank Armentrout for acting when he did, he said.
But the eventfulness of the flight did not stop there. Once they were on the tarmac in Seattle, another passenger who "was frustrated at the flight diversion" punched a bathroom door, according to the FBI's Seattle field office.
That person, who has not been identified, was removed from the flight, which eventually landed in Houston at 12:42 p.m. CT, according to FlightAware.com.
After having finally arrived in Houston, Armentrout said he was glad his feet were on the ground.
"It was a weird flight," he said, adding that he will return to Japan on Friday and is feeling a little anxious about the journey.
Keeping in mind what happened, Armentrout wants others to stay aware of their surroundings.
"I want to make sure everybody understands what time we are in in this world nowadays and that they need to be aware of their surroundings all the time," he said.
This article was originally published on NBCNews.com
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
Thieves steal $2 million in jewelry from Seattle store in 90 seconds
A group of thieves stole millions of dollars of merchandise from a family-owned jewelry store in a bold daylight robbery in Seattle that took only 90 seconds, police said. The Seattle Police Department said it responded to reports of a robbery at Menashe and Sons Jeweler in West Seattle around noon on August 14. Four masked suspects allegedly used hammers to smash a locked front glass door, then destroyed six display cases, police said. The incident was caught on surveillance cameras inside the store, CBS affiliate KIRO reported. Police said the suspects were armed with a Taser and bear spray. The weapons were pointed at store employees while the robbery occurred. No injuries were reported. Bret Gibson, an employee at a gym across the street from the shop, told KIRO that the robbery could be heard inside his workplace. "You could still hear like a lot of breaking glass and banging around and stuff, so they were in there around noon still robbing the store while everyone was on the phone calling the cops," Gibson told KIRO. After the rapid-fire robbery, the suspects fled in a getaway car, police said. A search of the area yielded no results. Anyone with information about the robbery is asked to contact the Seattle Police Department at its Violent Crimes Tip Line. Josh Menashe, the vice president of the store, told the Associated Press that the store will "be closed for a while." "We're pretty shook up as a staff," he said. Menashe told the Associated Press that workers cleaned up the broken glass from the incident and were working on a full inventory of the stolen goods. One glass case held between $700,000 and $800,000 in Rolex luxury watches, while another held an emerald necklace valued at $125,000, the Seattle police said. The case with the necklace also held a platinum diamond. Two other display cases "contained a large amount of gold jewelry." Saturday Sessions: Lord Huron performs "Nothing I Need" Saturday Sessions: Lord Huron performs "Bag of Bones" Saturday Sessions: Lord Huron performs "Watch Me Go" Solve the daily Crossword


CBS News
7 hours ago
- CBS News
Thieves steal $2 million in jewelry from Seattle store in just 90 seconds
A group of thieves stole millions of dollars of merchandise from a family-owned jewelry store in a bold daylight robbery in Seattle that took only 90 seconds, police said. The Seattle Police Department said it responded to reports of a robbery at Menashe and Sons Jeweler in West Seattle around noon on August 14. Four masked suspects allegedly used hammers to smash a locked front glass door, then destroyed six display cases, police said. The incident was caught on surveillance cameras inside the store, CBS affiliate KIRO reported. Police said the suspects were armed with a Taser and bear spray. The weapons were pointed at store employees while the robbery occurred. No injuries were reported. Bret Gibson, an employee at a gym across the street from the shop, told KIRO that the robbery could be heard inside his workplace. "You could still hear like a lot of breaking glass and banging around and stuff, so they were in there around noon still robbing the store while everyone was on the phone calling the cops," Gibson told KIRO. After the rapid-fire robbery, the suspects fled in a getaway car, police said. A search of the area yielded no results. Anyone with information about the robbery is asked to contact the Seattle Police Department at its Violent Crimes Tip Line. Josh Menashe, the vice president of the store, told the Associated Press that the store will "be closed for a while." "We're pretty shook up as a staff," he said. Menashe told the Associated Press that workers cleaned up the broken glass from the incident and were working on a full inventory of the stolen goods. One glass case held between $700,000 and $800,000 in Rolex luxury watches, while another held an emerald necklace valued at $125,000, the Seattle police said. The case with the necklace also held a platinum diamond. Two other display cases "contained a large amount of gold jewelry."

Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Thieves grab $2 million in jewelry in Seattle heist that took less than 2 minutes
SEATTLE (AP) — Smash-and-grab thieves in Seattle made off with an estimated $2 million in diamonds, luxury watches, gold and other items in a daring midday jewelry store robbery that took just about 90 seconds, police said Friday. Video from the West Seattle store's surveillance cameras shows four masked suspects shattering the locked glass front door with hammers and then ransacking six display cases Thursday. One display held around $750,000 worth in Rolex watches, police said in a statement, and another had an emerald necklace valued at $125,000. A masked suspect threatened workers with bear spray and a Taser, police said, but no one was injured. 'We're pretty shook up as a staff,' Josh Menashe, vice president of the family-owned store, said by phone Friday. 'We're gonna be closed for a while.' Menashe said workers finished cleaning up the broken glass and were working on a full inventory of the losses. Police said they responded to the robbery but the suspects had already fled in a getaway car and eluded a search of the area.