US | airplane Crew, Fliers Tackle Man Banging on Cockpit Door It's the third such incident in one day on US planes By Evann Gastaldo Posted May 9, 2011 8:25 AM CDT Copied In this photo taken Oct. 5, 2010, an American Airlines jet, right, taxis past United Airlines and United Express jets at O'Hare International Airport in Chicago. (AP Photo/M. Spencer Green) Yesterday was a day of airplane security disturbances: In the third incident reported so far, crew members and passengers wrestled a man to the ground after he started pounding on the plane's cockpit door. Rageit Almurisi, 28, brushed past a flight attendant on last night's flight while screaming incoherently, and was tackled by a male flight attendant as he began pounding on the door. American Airlines Flight 1561 was about 10 minutes from landing at San Francisco International Airport at the time. A few passengers and crew members assisted the flight attendant, and Almurisi was put in plastic handcuffs and taken into police custody after the plane landed safely. He was carrying a Yemen passport but his nationality is not clear, the AP reports. He has been charged with the federal offense of interfering with a flight crew, but no motive has been established and one officer says he does not know if the incident was related to terrorism. Click to read about the other two flight security disturbances. Read These Next Canada's Mark Carney is standing by his big Davos speech. Sydney Sweeney is at the center of a controversy yet again. Crew dealing with an allegedly unruly passenger had to get creative. Friday is a very big day for the first lady. Report an error