Guilty Plea in Hoax Bomb Threat to Delta Airlines
SACRAMENTO—United States Attorney Lawrence G. Brown
announced today that APUN MAHAPATRA, 31, of Sacramento, pleaded
guilty today before Senior District Court Judge Edward J. Garcia
to making a hoax bomb threat to Delta Airlines.
This case is the product of extensive investigation by the
Federal Bureau of Investigation.
According to Assistant United States Attorneys Benjamin
Wagner and Daniel McConkie, who are prosecuting the case,
MAHAPATRA admitted that on May 1, 2008 he accessed the Delta
Airlines website via the Internet from his home in Sacramento,
and signed into a live chat session with a Delta Airlines
operator employee. In response to a message from the Delta
employee asking “How may I assist you?”, MAHAPATRA typed a
message indicating that a flight scheduled to leave Mumbai
International Airport for Atlanta on May 2 should be cancelled
because there would be a “Hijack and Bomblast.” [sic] At the
time he sent the message to Delta, MAHAPATRA knew that it was
already early on Friday, May 2, in Mumbai, and that there was a
Delta Airlines commercial jetliner scheduled to depart Mumbai for
New York and Atlanta on that date.
MAHAPATRA made the hoax threat because he had recently
returned from India where he had been involved in a domestic
dispute with his wife, and he believed that she may have been
traveling on that flight and he intended to cause her significant
disruption and anxiety. As a result of the threat, Delta
offloaded all of its cargo from the plane, at a cost of over
$35,000; all passengers’ carry-on baggage was screened at the
gate; enhanced physical security measures were taken on the
aircraft; the flight was delayed about an hour in departing
Mumbai; and airport security officials in Mumbai were notified
and took additional security measures. The passengers were not
informed of the threat.
MAHAPATRA is scheduled to be sentenced on July 31, 2009,
before Judge Garcia. He faces a maximum punishment of up to five
years imprisonment and a $250,000. However, the actual sentence
will be determined at the discretion of the court after
consideration of the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, which take
into account a number of variables, and any applicable statutory
sentencing factors.
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