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Drunk and disruptive passengers aboard Newark-bound flight force emergency landing

A United Airlines flight traveling from London Heathrow to Newark Liberty International Airport made an emergency landing in Bangor, Maine on Friday due to two supposedly drunk passengers who “became disruptive,” the airline confirmed.

“Law enforcement officials removed the two passengers and the flight has already re-departed for Newark Liberty International Airport,” United Airlines told The Post.

Video posted on X by Jewish news service Kol Haolom shows uniformed officers on board the aircraft lifting an unidentified man out of his seat as his fellow passengers cheer and applaud.

A separate video posted by the outlet shows officers carrying a man — who appears bound by his hands and feet — down a set of mobile runway stairs and into a police SUV.

The incident that led up to the passengers’ removal was not shown in the video.

“Members of the Bangor Police Department Airport Division assisted Customs and Border Protection and the FBI when an international flight diverted to the Bangor International Airport this morning,” Bangor Police said in a statement.

“Two passengers were removed from the plane and CBP and FBI are handling the investigation.”

The emergency landing was attributed to a “passenger disturbance” by the FAA.

The flight was diverted and landed at Bangor International Airport due unruly passenger, Radar reported.
The flight was diverted and landed at Bangor International Airport due to an unruly passenger, Radar reported. FlightRadar24

Flight UA 883 took off from London at 7:52 a.m. and landed at Bangor International Airport at 9:59 a.m. — nearly 90 minutes before it was scheduled to arrive at Newark, according to Flight Aware.

The Boeing 767 was back in the air en route to Newark shortly before noon.

The plane was carrying several observant Jews, who will now arrive in New Jersey just in time to observe Shabbat, or Shabbos, which begins at sundown, Kol Haolom wrote.

The two customers who prompted the emergency landing will be banned from future United flights while the incident is under review, the airline told The Post.

A Level 3 warning in an aircraft typically involves life-threatening behavior or display of a weapon.

Bangor International Airport did not immediately respond to The Post’s requests for a comment on the incident.

Additional reporting by Chris Nesi.