Clayton Osbon, 49, had been JetBlue captain for 12 years

Came out of toilet telling passengers: 'Say your prayers, say your prayers' while on a packed flight from Las Vegas



Screamed 'Iraq, al Qaeda, terrorism, we're all going down'

Four passengers, including a retired NYPD sergeant, jumped the man



Osbon has been suspended and charged with interfering with a flight crew



Berserk’ JetBlue pilot ‘ranted about Jesus, 9/11, Iraq, Iran and terrorists and sins of Vegas during bizarre sermon in cockpit’

Criminal charges have been filed against the Jet Blue pilot who went 'beserk' during a flight from New York to Las Vegas and started shouting incoherently, alarming passengers and his co-pilots.

Court documents now reveal the full range of Captain Clayton Osbon's rant, stating that he 'yelled jumbled comments about Jesus, September 11, Iraq, Iran, and terrorists'.

He also screamed: 'Guys, push it to full throttle!'

The bizarre episode scared all on board, and he was eventually restrained by male passengers, one of which was a retired NYPD sergeant.

His unusual behavior started in the cockpit during flight 191 from JFK airport to Las Vegas, alarming his co-pilot.

'Osbon began talking about religion, but his statements were not coherent,' the affadavit said.



Scroll down to see footage of the incident, and hear audio of air traffic control call...

Mental breakdown: A JetBlue flight captain, pictured, was restrained and taken to hospital, after going berserk mid-flight and screaming at passengers to say their prayers because the plane was going down Mental breakdown: A JetBlue flight captain, pictured, was restrained and taken to hospital, after going berserk mid-flight and screaming at passengers to say their prayers because the plane was going down

Osbon, who has been charged with interfering with a flight crew and is receiving medical care while in FBI custody, has been a JetBlue captain for 12 years, and has about 30 years experience around planes. That charge carries a potential sentence of up to 20 years in prison.

'The [first officer] became concerned when Osbon said "things just don't matter." Osbon yelled over the radio to air traffic control and instructed them to be quiet.'

The first officer became 'really worried' when Osbon started to randomly flip the controls and complain about too much noise.

Osbon also said 'We're not going to Vegas' and started saying 'completely unrelated numbers' before he 'began giving what the (first officer) described as a sermon'.

In that talk, he rumbled on about 'the sins in Las Vegas', and the co-pilot eventually decided to coax him out of cockpit on Tuesday.

After the co-pilot suggested that they call in a third Jet Blue pilot who was travelling on board as a passenger, and Osbon then left into the cabin.



Captain Clayton Osbon (L) pictured here shaking hands with the vice-president of JetBlue's JFK operations Alex Battaglia has been suspended after going berserk mid-flight

Unruly pilot: The captain of the JetBlue flight has been identified as Clayton Osbon, pictured here in a cockpit

While there, he 'aggressively grabbed a flight attendant's hands' and brought up the '150 souls on board' before trying in vain to get back into the cockpit. Unbeknownst to him, the co-pilot had changed the security codes once he left and had already radioed down for assistance on the ground.

He went 'crazy' after going to the toilet and returning to find that he had been locked out of the cockpit and the code had been changed.

He screamed 'say your prayers, say your prayers' at terrified passengers after running up and down the aisle shouting 'Iraq, al-Qaeda, terrorism, we're all going down.'

Details of the first officer's account were revealed today in a complaint report written by John Whitworth, a special agent for the FBI, according to CBS.

The airline's spokeswoman Allison Steinberg said today that Osbon was taken off active duty pending a review of the incident. Wife: Connye Osbon has defended her husband of seven years Osbon has been married to his wife Connye since 2005, according to the pilot's Facebook page. Mrs Osbon, speaking to ABC News, warned that there might be more to what happened aboard the flight. She told the network: 'There are several different sides to every story. Just keep that in mind'. But she added, 'I don't have a clue... I have no idea what's going on.I haven't spoken with him.'

Passengers told local media that about three hours into the flight the captain had behaved oddly after going to the toilet, randomly talking with passengers on his way back to the cockpit.

The veteran captain, a commercial pilot since 1989, was not at the plane controls but 'began acting erratically, flipping switches in the cockpit and appearing confused,' according to the sources reports ABC. They said his co-pilot tricked him into going to the passenger compartment to check something out, then locked the door and changed the security code behind him.

Telling their story: Tony Antolino, right, and Paul Babakitis, left, two of the passengers who helped take down the unruly pilot, spoke about the ordeal with Piers Morgan last night Restrained: Four passengers on the flight jumped onto the captain after being urged to by a flight attendant and held him down until the plane made an emergency landing in Texas

Outnumbered: The captain was subdued thanks to the help of passengers on the flight 'packed with burly men' heading to the 2012 International Security Conference in Las Vegas When he went back to the cockpit and realized he had been locked out, a passenger said Osbon, a married father of one from Savannah, Georgia, began screaming 'let me in' and acting erratically. Mark Sellouk told CBS: 'He's banging on the door, yelling at the first officer, I think his name is Steve, 'Bring the throttle to idle! Bring it to idle! Bring it to idle! We're going down, we're all going to die! Pray to Jesus. Open this goddamn door!'



Tony Antolino, a 40-year-old executive for a security firm, said the captain seemed disoriented and agitated, then began yelling about an unspecified threat linked to Iran, Iraq and Afghanistan. RELATED ARTICLES Previous

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Why budget airlines may not save your family money as flight... Share this article Share 'They're going to take us down, they're taking us down, they're going to take us down. Say the Lord's prayer, say the Lord's prayer,' the captain screamed, according to Antolino. Antolino, who said he sat in the 10th row, said he and three others tackled the captain as he ran for the cockpit door. Lost control: Osbon, 49, screamed 'say your prayers, say your prayers' at horrified passengers after running up and down the aisle shouting 'Iraq, al-Qaeda, terrorism, we're all going down' Ranting: Clayton Osbon filmed here screaming at passengers on the flight from JFK to Las Vegas

The passengers pinned the captain and held him down while the plane landed at Rick Husband Amarillo International Airport. Even though he was outnumbered, it was no easy task to restrain the captain Paul Babakitis, a former New York City police officer, told CBS.

'We're talking about a guy about 6 foot 3, 6 foot 4, about 260 pounds, solid as a rock, short cropped hair, bent with a cause, which we don't know what his cause is,' says Babakitis. It was a long 30 minute wait before the plane was safely on the ground.

'That's how we landed,' he said. 'We just grabbed a different body part and sat on top of him quite literally. There were four of us on top of him. ... Everybody else kind of took a seat and that's how we landed.' said Antolino.

Antolino said that the plastic zip ties provided by the crew proved useless, and the men were forced to used seat belt and passenger's personal belts to try to restrain the man. ANOTHER MELTDOWN IN THE SKY A female passenger aboard a US Airways flight was arrested after attacking crew members before being wrestled to the floor yesterday.

US Airways spokesman Bill McGlashen said: ' All I know is that during the flight the passenger became disruptive to the point where the crew took the precautionary measure of restraining her in the cabin.'

The passenger on flight 1697 from Charlotte, North Carolina, to Fort Myers, Florida kicked, scratched and spit on crew members, according to Raleigh station WCNC. The woman complained of being scared of flying shortly before she became violent, flight attendants said.

The woman left her seat and knocked one flight attendant to the ground, the TV station reported. One female flight attendant had bruises and bandages on her arms in addition to scratch marks. A Lee County sheriff's deputy on board the flight helped tackle the woman. The woman was screaming and crying while she was checked by medics in the terminal before being taken away. 'The real hero here is the co-pilot, he had the instincts to recognise that something was going wrong in the cockpit and he managed to somehow persuade him out of the cockpit.

'That really was what completely averted what could have been a tragedy yesterday.' Paul Babakitis, a retired police officer said he and other passengers sprung into action to stop Osbon.

Babakitis told CNN's Piers Morgan: 'I felt if he got in the cockpit, he was going to try to take that plane down, and not for a safe landing'.

An off-duty airline captain who just happened to be a passenger on the flight went to the flight deck and took over the duties of the ill captain 'once on the ground,' the airline said in a statement. JetBlue CEO Dave Barger, appearing on NBC's Today this morning and said that he knew the captain personally for a long time.

He said that there were no signs that suggested that the captain could suffer from an in-flight meltdown. He was a 'consummate professional' Barger said. 'It was a true team effort at 35,000 feet yesterday,' Barger said, praising the response by passengers and crew. He described it as a medical situation that turned into a security one. He said he did not think anyone from the company has since talked to Osbon.

'The captain’s now in the hands of medical care, obviously, under the custody of the FBI.' Barger said told Today program.

'I’ve known the captain personally for a long period of time and there’s been no indication of this at all.'

Josh Redick, a passenger seated near the middle of the jet, added: 'He was irate. He was spouting off about Afghanistan and souls and al Qaeda'.

The pilot was restrained and carted off the flight when it landed in Texas

New Yorker Gabriel Schonzeit, who was seated in the third row of the plane, told USA Today that Osbon had started 'shouting, "Iraq, al-Qaeda, terrorism, we're all going down" during his mid-flight meltdown.



EMERGENCY CALL TO AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL REVEALED:

Pilot: JetBlue 191, we are going to need authorities and medical assistance at the airport

Air traffic: Yes sir, we are standing by for you At landing Pilot: Can we request medical and security as soon as possible Air traffic: We've got medical and security standing by Air traffic hands over to Amarillo police Pilot: Can you guys come up here and arrest *****? Police: 'We're coming up to the door as we speak, can you have someone open it for me on the inside? We have medical and personnel on the ground on standby Pilot: Thanks, will do

Scroll down to listen to the full three minute conversation between air traffic control and the pilot



Mr Schonzeit added: 'It seemed like he went crazy'.

Passenger Jazaria Felder told CBS: 'There was a lady next to me named Desere, and she was praying the whole time. She grabbed me, and I think because of her, I calmed down, because I was ready to run. I don't know where I was going, but I was ready to run!!'



Grant Heppes, a 22-year-old passenger also from New York said that the man was wearing a JetBlue uniform, and that he started to become disruptive when he was barred from getting back inside the cockpit.

One passenger told Fox 5 News the pilot was in the cabin trying to storm the cockpit.

'I saw a guy wearing a pilot's uniform run down the aisle screaming and yelling and banging on the cockpit door to let him in,' the witness said.

The witness, Fox 5 News reports, said the man was screaming, 'Say your prayers! Say your prayers!'

Heidi Karg, another passenger on the flight, told CNN that the man was desperately trying to get into the cockpit, shouting 'I need the code, gimme the code, I need to get in there.'



A flight attendant quickly got onto the intercom and called on passengers to 'restrain him'.

'Nobody knew what to do because he is the captain of the plane,' said Don Davis, the owner of a Ronkonkoma, N.Y.-based wireless broadband manufacturer who was traveling to Sin City for a security industry conference.



'You're not just going to jump up and attack the captain,' Davis said.



But a group of male passengers, including a retired NYPD sergeant and former prison security guard David Gonzalez jumped up and held the man down.

In custody: The unidentified captain is removed in restraints from the flight to a waiting ambulance

Outburst: Passengers said the pilot lost it after he went back to the cockpit and realized he had been locked out by his co-pilot

'I knew there were about 130 people on the plane...families, kids...and I thought, this is not going to happen on my plane,' Mr Gonzalez told ABCNews.com.



Hero: former prison security guard David Gonzalez, 50, had the choked the captain until he passed out

The 50-year-old said he knew he act quickly when he saw the captain reached for the emergency exit.



'I just didn't want him opening up that door,' Gonzalez told ABC News. 'I knew if he got in there, we wouldn't be sitting here now.'

Mr Gonzalez said he went to assist the flight attendant and asked the pilot what his problem was.



Mr Gonzalez said the man replied, 'You'd better start praying right now' and was shouting about Iraq and Iran.



'I said, 'I'm going to show you Iraq and Iran right now,' and I just took him in a choke hold,' Mr Gonzalez said.



'I started to cut his windpipe off so he couldn't get any air.'



the father-of-five from Pennsylvania described feeling the man get weak and he passed out about three minutes later.



Mr Gonzalez and the group of men restrained the pilot using seat belts and offered him some water when he came to, reports ABC News.



'If he got a second wind, I'd have to apply more pressure and I didn't want to hurt him," Gonzalez said.



'I just wanted to get him calm, get the plane down and get him some medical assistance.'

Mr Gonzalez sat on the unruly pilot worried that he might get free until the plane landed safely in Amarillo, Texas.



MEDICAL BACKGROUND PROBE

The FBI was coordinating an investigation with the airport police, Amarillo police, the FAA and the TSA, according to agency spokeswoman Lydia Maese in Dallas. She declined to comment on whether any arrests have been made. As a result of the incident, the FAA will review the captain's medical certificate - essentially a good housekeeping seal of approval that the pilot is healthy.

All pilots working for scheduled airlines must have a first class medical certificate.

The certificates are required to be renewed every year if the pilot is under 40, every six months if 40 or over. To obtain a certificate, the pilot must receive a physical examination by an FAA-designated medical examiner that includes questions about the pilot's psychological condition. The medical examiner can order additional psychological testing. Pilots are required to disclose all existing physical and psychological conditions and medications. In 2008, an Air Canada co-pilot had a mental breakdown on a flight from Toronto to London and was forcibly removed from the cockpit, restrained and sedated. A flight attendant with flying experience helped the pilot safely make an emergency landing in Ireland, and none of the 146 passengers and nine crew members on board were injured.

The flight had been packed with heavily built men heading to the 2012 International Security Conference in Las Vegas held for professionals working in ‘law enforcement, border protection and campus security’.

It has media sponsors including The Counter Terrorist magazine, Homeland Security Newswire and Government Security News.

One witness told CBS: 'He picked the wrong plane. Huge guys just tackled him. The response was Olympics kind of stuff.'

When the pilot had been safely removed passengers thanked Mr Gonzalez for his bravery and asked to take photos with him, reports ABC News.



'It's amazing how people thanked me,' Gonzalez said. 'I don't find myself a hero. I just couldn't take that. I got that spark. I knew I had to get involved.'



'Someone next to me said he was saying something about bombs,' passenger Tiffany Lee, a 26-year-old Las Vegas resident told the Post.

'It was so scary. People around me were freaking out a little bit. The girl next to me was saying, 'Oh my god, what If I never talk to my fiancé again?’

CNN quotes one passenger, Tom Murphy, as saying that the captain had come into the cabin and initially tried to break into a locked bathroom, then on the cockpit door.



The flight attendants had tried to take the pilot to the back of the plane, but he broke free and ran to the front, threatening to blow up the plane and saying there was a bomb on board, reports CNN.

The pilot had also urged for someone to restrain him, she said. 'We heard the word 'bomb'.

Helped arrived once the plane landed in Texas to escort the captain off the flight

The captain who appears to have suffered from a 'mental breakdown' was taken to an Amarillo hospital The unruly pilot was taken to hospital with a police escort after being removed from the flight JetBlue CEO Dave Barger, appearing on NBC's Today, said that he knew the captain personally for a long time and that he was a 'consummate professional'

Laurie Dhue, a former Fox News Channel anchor who was on board the flight, told the network passengers could hear the pilot using the words 'Afghanistan' and 'Israel' during the commotion.

The flight was taking passengers to Las Vegas for a security convention when the plane was diverted at around 10am

MENTAL BREAKDOWN IN THE SKIES

The Jet Blue captain’s episode is the second time this month that a member of flight crew’s mental breakdown has grounded a flight. On March 9, an American Airlines flight attendant screamed ‘don’t blame me if we crash’ and ranted about 9/11 over the intercom during the pre-flight safety briefing.

First class passengers on the flight from Dallas-Fort Worth to Chicago had to help cabin crew restrain the attendant, who suffered from bipolar disorder.

Terrified onlookers called 911, telling police that the flight crew were plotting to crash the plane over the intercom.

The plane was turned around and taxied back to the gate where the woman was arrested. In August, 2010, Jet Blue flight attendant Steven Slater ranted over the intercom at a passenger who stood up while his plane was taxiing – before grabbing beer from the emergency cart, activating the emergency exit slide and jumping down it. The 38-year-old was later arrested at his home after fleeing the tarmac at JFK airport.

In January 2008, an Air Canada flight attendant had to help make an emergency landing in Ireland after the co-pilot had a nervous breakdown.

The co-pilot had to be dragged from the cockpit after he started ranting and become ‘uncooperative’ in the cockpit.

He was sedated by doctors onboard the flight from Toronto to London, while the hostess who held a commercial pilot’s license took the co-pilot’s seat and helped land the plane at Shannon airport in Ireland.



JetBlue said the captain had a 'medical situation' and was taken to an Amarillo hospital.



A spokeswoman Allison Steinberg said today that Osbon was taken off active duty pending a review of the incident.



According to his Linkedin profile, Osbon is also the director of Body By Vi, a company which claims to help people to a better 'life through health and financial prosperity'.

Another ambulance was also called to check on a passenger who was experiencing chest pains.



JetBlue says an off-duty captain who happened to be aboard the plane went to the flight deck and took over the duties of the ill captain 'once on the ground.'



Flight 191 had 135 passengers and five crew members when it took off from John F. Kennedy Airport at about 7.28am, JetBlue said.



Shane Helton, 39, of Quinlan, Oklahoma, said he saw emergency and security personnel coming on and off the plane as it sat on the tarmac at the airport.



'They pulled one guy out on a stretcher and put him in an ambulance,' said Helton, who went to the airport with his fiancée to see one of her sons off as he joined the Navy.



Helton said the ambulance then sat on the tarmac next to the plane for more than 30 minutes.

Some medical experts dismissed the statement that the pilot had suffered a panic attack and said it was more like to have been a toxic reaction to infection, drugs or even an encephalitic event caused by a brain tumor.



The airline said the passengers had to await another plane to take them on to their destination.

John Cox, a former pilot who is now a safety expert, told USA TODAY that the other pilot on the flight could have landed the plane safely alone without assistant from the off-duty captain.



Mr Cox said crew members are trained to restrain combative passengers under a program that could have applied to the pilot.

'The same training to restrain an abusive passenger that presents a physical threat could be utilized against a crew member,' said Cox, as president of Safety Operation Systems.



'It was great that there was another captain that was on the flight that could assist the first officer. Had he not been there, though, the first officer is completely capable and trained to land the aircraft. There was never a risk to the passengers.'



Flight 191 from JFK to Las Vegas today diverted to Amarillo, Texas after pilots kicked the captain out of the cock pit (file photo) VIDEO: Footage claims to show the captain going berserk on the plane. He is then escorted off Flight 191