General

Rape in air: Man arrested for rape in United Airlines First Class cabin

NewsGram Desk

A British man has been arrested at Heathrow after a fellow passenger claimed she was raped in the first class cabin on a transatlantic overnight flight, Daily Mail reported. The alleged victim, also British, claims she was attacked while others slept on the flight from Newark, New Jersey to London's Heathrow airport. She complained to cabin crew of the United Airlines flight saying a man had forced her to have sex with him, according to The Sun.

Cabin crew called ahead to London police to report the incident, and Metropolitan Police officers boarded the plane to arrest a 40-year-old man after it had landed at the airport's Terminal 2 around 6.30 a.m. on Monday last week. The woman, also 40, was taken by police to a rape counselling facility and was interviewed by officers who specialise in rape cases.

Also read: Why do they rape?

Meanwhile, officers conducted a search of the luxury cabin while the man — who was arrested on suspicion of rape — was taken into custody at Heathrow police station. There, officers took scans of his finger prints, a mugshot and DNA samples. He has since been released under investigation, with an inquiry on-going, the report said. The arrest and investigation was confirmed by a spokesman for the Metropolitan police, The Sun reported.

According to the newspaper, sources said the two people were sitting in different rows in the cabin, in which return-flight tickets cost as much as 3,000 pounds. They appeared to be strangers, but during the flight had been talking with each other and drinking together at the bar in the cabin's lounge.

(IANS/PR)

(Keywords: rape, women, united airline, first class cabin, British man, Newark, New Jersey, London's Heathrow airport)

Dozens arrested after London protest blocking removal of asylum seekers

Toxic Gas Adds to a Long History of Pollution in Southwest Memphis

Between Soil and Society: New book traces history and development of U.S. conservation policy

Agricultural management practices evaluated in new nitrous oxide accounting method

For microscopic organisms, ocean currents act as ‘expressway’ to deeper depths, study finds