A passenger aboard a Delta flight ended up in handcuffs after launching an anti-Semitic tirade en route from Washington, DC, to Atlanta on Thanksgiving eve, according to reports.

David Toaff, 37, yelled remarks that fellow fliers interpreted as anti-Semitic, Atlanta police told USA Today.

“Preliminary information indicates that while in flight … a male was yelling, asking Jewish people on board to identify themselves and making remarks about bombings to passengers aboard the aircraft,” Officer Lisa Bender told the news outlet.

Police at Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport in Atlanta responded around 8 p.m. Wednesday to meet Flight 1822 at the gate, where Toaff “continued the disturbance” and resisted arrest, the report said.

“The male was taken into custody and charged with obstruction and disorderly conduct. He was transported to the Clayton County Jail,” Bender said.

Another passenger, Jordan Dale, recorded the suspect’s unruly encounter with police.

Toaff, who is wearing a Jewish prayer shawl, can be seen asking cops why he is being detained, insisting that he’s “not a bad person.”

“What did I do wrong,” Toaff asks as a man off camera calls him a “Nazi.”

“You’re making it worse for yourself,” one of the officers says.

“I’m not doing anything wrong!” Toaff shouts before being cuffed.

“Today a man on my plane went on an anti-Semitic tirade and demanded ‘all Jews raise their hands’ so he could ‘identify them,’” Dale wrote on Twitter in a post accompanying his video.

“Later, during the arrest he protested. Incredible work by Atlanta police,” he added.

In a statement to USA Today, Delta rep Adrian Gee said “local law enforcement met flight 1822 (DCA-ATL) in Atlanta due to a customer’s behavior onboard the flight.”