Mounties investigating threat onboard Flair Airlines plane at Vancouver International Airport - Action News
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Mounties investigating threat onboard Flair Airlines plane at Vancouver International Airport

RCMP say they are investigating after a passenger on a Flair Airlines flight bound for Vancouver Friday night reported a "possible threat".

Flight from Edmonton was grounded at Vancouver International Airport Friday while RCMP investigated

An airplane with navy blue and sea green accents, with the word 'FLAIR' on its side.
A Flair Airlines plane is pictured at Waterloo airport in October 2021. RCMP say a passenger on a flight from Edmonton to Vancouver on Friday received a threatening message in the air, which led to the flight being grounded as Mounties investigated. (Paula Duhatschek/CBC)

RCMP say they are investigating after a passenger on a Flair Airlines flight bound for Vancouver Friday night reported a "possible threat."

Richmond RCMP the detachment with jurisdiction over Vancouver International Airport (YVR) said in a statement Saturday that a passenger on Flight 2799 from Edmonton received a threatening message on their phoneand immediatelyinformed authorities.

A YVR spokesperson said in a statementthat the plane, which arrived at 11:44 p.m. PST on Friday, remained on the taxiway until 1 a.m. Saturday while Mounties investigated. Police then cleared the plane to proceed to its gate. Passengers were not allowed to leave the plane until 2:15 a.m.

CBC News has reached out to Richmond RCMP to find out the exact nature of the threat. No one has been arrested in the incident, but RCMPspokespersonCpl. Dennis Hwang says their investigation is "active and ongoing."

"All we can say is the communication was in electronic form," he said. "Aboard aircraft there is very little communications such as cellular communications."

Hwang specified that when cellphones are in airplane mode,they can only communicate through Wi-Fi and Bluetooth.

"At the request of the Flair Airlines crew, members of the RCMP boarded [the] Flair Airlines flight," a Flair spokesperson said in an email. "The passengers and crew deplaned following a brief investigation of suspicious activity in flight by a passenger."

Under the Criminal Code, anyone caught uttering threats could be sentenced to jail time. Mounties say other sections of the code may also apply in this case.

"The safety of the flight crew, passengers, and the public will always be of paramount concern for us," said Hwang in a statement.