Mayday (2013) s03e05 Episode Script

Bomb on Board

(THEME MUSIC) It's before sunrise on 11 December, 1994.
While most inhabitants of this city of 1.
5 million have a few more hours to sleep, 26-year-old Amaldo Forlani makes an early start.
ALARM BEEPS Forlani is not his real name - it's the alias he's chosen for today's mission.
He's actually from Pakistan, not Italy.
He is putting his latest invention through an important test.
Everything must go like clockwork.
In his line of work there's no room for error.
He is a highly skilled terrorist bomb-builder.
He packs the liquid explosive bomb very carefully.
(whistles) From his apartment downtown it takes less then 30 minutes to get to the airport.
He arrives in plenty of time for his 5am flight with Philippines Airlines.
Before he can board, the bomber must outwit airport security screening procedures.
He's designed the components of his bomb to pass undetected by X-ray and metal-detection equipment.
Or so he hopes.
He bought the ticket as Amaldo Forlani.
He's a skilled forger, and he has made himself a fake Italian passport with that identity.
If his cover is blown, his career as a globe-trotting terrorist is over.
Having successfully got the bomb through airport security, he boards his Philippine Airlines flight.
The final destination of PAL 434 is Tokyo, but there's a stopover in the Philippine resort town of Cebu, over 550km to the south of Manila.
This is as far as the bomber is flying today.
That's 10,000 feet and weather still looking clear.
Thanks, Dex.
Let's go to autopilot.
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen.
Your captain Ed Reyes speaking.
Welcome aboard Flight 434, flying south from Manila to Cebu and continuing onwards to Narita Airport, Tokyo.
Flight 434 is under the command of Captain Ed Reyes, a former Air Force pilot who's been flying for Philippine Airlines for nine years.
Our estimated arrival time is now 5:45.
The first leg of the flight is fairly empty.
Passengers are scattered around the jumbo jet's 400 seats.
After take-off, the bomber is able to move.
He chooses seat 26K, located directly over the centre fuel tank in some 747s.
The cabin is tended by stewardess Maria De La Cruz.
She flies domestic routes, and has worked for Philippine Airlines for one year.
Can I get you some juice or coffee? Juice, please.
Now the bomber must find a vacant lavatory to assemble the explosive device.
Arming the bomb only takes minutes, but requires total concentration.
The final step is setting the timer so it will explode in four hours time, long after he leaves the plane.
He hides the bomb in the life jacket pocket underneath his seat.
He then changes seats.
When she returns, Maria De La Cruz notices that the roving passenger has moved seats again.
She will remember that he left his breakfast untouched, and that the rest of the flight passed uneventfully.
As Philippine Airlines Flight 434 begins its final approach into Cebu, more passengers are getting ready to board the aircraft that will take them onwards to Tokyo.
ED REYES: Cabin crew, prepare for landing.
Cabin doors to automatic.
PAL 434 lands at Cebu at 6:50am, and several of the passengers disembark, including the terrorist with the alias Amaldo Forlani.
Bye-bye.
Thank you.
Maria De La Cruz will also leave Flight 434.
A new cabin crew will take over for the four-and-a-half-hour flight to Tokyo.
256 new passengers board the 747 that arrived from Manila.
Many of the passengers in this cabin are Japanese.
Among them is 24-year-old engineer Haruki Ikegami.
He's looking forward to getting home to Tokyo after his first trip overseas.
Airport congestion delays the departure by 38 minutes, but the timer on the bomb under seat 26K continues to tick.
8:30am, 11 December 1994.
All passengers for Philippine Airlines Flight 434 are now on board for the leg to Tokyo.
None of them is aware that two hours earlier, a terrorist planted a time bomb under one of their seats.
Steward Fernando Bayot is assisting passengers in the forward cabin on this four-and-a-half-hour flight.
At 8:38, PAL 434 is cleared for take-off.
On the flight deck, Captain Ed Reyes is assisted by First Officer Jamie Harrara and Systems Engineer Dexter Comendador.
Reyes and Comendador are both former Air Force pilots.
Haruki Ikegami is seated in 26K, the seat occupied by the bomber earlier on the first leg of Flight 434 from Manila to Cebu.
Several passengers in this cabin are coworkers travelling with a Japanese tour group, including Keisuke Aoki and Masaharu Mochizuki.
(speaks Japanese) TRANSLATOR: After take-off, everything seemed normal.
We were flying at 10,000 metres.
I was reading a magazine, then the meal was served.
After eating, I went to sleep.
31-year-old Yukihiko Sui stayed up all night on the last day of his trip, and he's ready to nap after breakfast.
He's sitting in row 27, one row behind the seat vacated by the bomber four hours earlier.
ED REYES: Ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain speaking.
It's a beautiful day in Tokyo, sunny and 26 degrees.
I expect we'll be landing at Narita Airport in two hours time.
Two hours into the flight, PAL 434 is cruising on autopilot 10,000 metres above Minami Daito Island, southern Japan.
To ease the pilot's workload, the autopilot remains on throughout the flight, keeping the aircraft on a constant heading and altitude.
BEEPING BEEPING CONTINUES PANICKED SCREAMING God forgive me.
That was my inner thought, you know.
"God forgive me.
I think I'm going to die now.
" Then, after that, I have to do what I have to do.
- Oh, I've lost control.
- I have control.
Dex, check the pressurisation loss.
Be prepared.
Checking.
Although the autopilot instantly corrects the aircraft's bank to the right, the effect of the blast is far from over.
TRANSLATOR: There was a loud bang which woke me up.
I could feel the plane expanding from the pressure.
I saw smoke, as well as debris, falling like powder.
SCREAMING Ladies and gentlemen, please stay in your seat.
The injured people were trying to get away from the area where the bomb was.
Please sit down! I stood up and saw that a lot of people were bleeding.
I thought my life was over.
Stay in your seat, please! The cabin crew's first priority is to stop passengers leaving their seats Yukihiko Sui is sitting in the row directly behind the explosion.
Both his legs are badly wounded.
Steward Fernando Bayot moves him away from the blast site.
Please, sit down and fasten your seatbelts! Bayot now turns his attention to Haruki Ikegami.
He has been swallowed by the smoking hole where seat 26K used to be.
FERNANDO BAYOT: I saw this man - all his head and his arms were peering out of the hole, so I tried to pull him out.
After the struggle to lift him out, Bayot realises that part of the lower half of Ikegami's body is missing.
Within a couple of minutes, he dies.
The cabin crew do not want Ikegami's death to panic passengers, so they pretend to minister to him.
Bayot then reports to the captain.
Captain.
Okay.
Keep the passengers calm.
Make sure they stay in their seats.
There's been an explosion in row 26 - one dead, several injured and the cabin is full of smoke.
There's a hole in the floor.
- Go inspect the damage, Dex.
- DEXTER: Yes, sir.
Reyes' first concern is that the blast could make a hole in the aircraft's skin.
This would lead to sudden depressurisation in the cabin and necessitate an emergency descent.
DEXTER COMENDADOR: There was a huge gaping hole beside her and if a small tear in the skin of the aircraft was if there were a hole there, it most probably would open up and then pull us out of the aircraft.
When I saw that there was no damage to the outer skin, I went up and reported to the captain we assumed that the pressurisation system would hold.
Immediately after the explosion, the copilot's steering wheel slams to the right and the aircraft banks in the same direction.
The autopilot immediately corrects the deviation, but soon Reyes discovers that the autopilot's steering system is another victim of the blast.
Then I said, "Okay, I am going to try to turn airplane using the autopilot," but there was no reaction whether I tried it - to make it go down or up or left and right turns, no reaction.
I said, "Now we have a problem.
" Naha, Pal 434 declaring emergency.
Explosion on board.
We have casualties.
Requesting emergency landing at Naha.
We will need full emergency services on landing.
RADIO: PAL 434, Naha.
Please repeat.
Say again.
Naha, PAL 434 declaring emergency.
Explosion on board.
We have casualties.
Request emergency landing at Naha.
We will need full emergency Getting the Japanese air traffic controller to understand the emergency proves to be difficult.
Naha, Naha, Naha.
This is Philippines Airline 434.
Flight level 330.
A bomb has exploded on board - bravo oscar mike bravo.
Bomb explosion.
Request emergency landing at Naha.
And there was silence.
Then the controller came in, another controller, an American.
"Okay, Philippines Airline 434.
I am taking over.
" The American air traffic controller is from an American base on Okinawa.
Turn left heading Then I shout back, "We cannot turn at this moment yet.
" "We will tell you when we are starting to turn towards Naha.
" We have problems with our flight controls.
Ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain speaking.
We will be making an early landing at Naha Airport in Okinawa.
We will be landing as soon as possible, so please remain in your seat with your seatbelt fastened.
But landing at Naha is easier said than done.
The autopilot is not responding to any of Reyes' commands, and PAL 434 is heading straight past Okinawa.
Reyes must find a way to steer if he is to have any chance of landing safely.
But disengaging the autopilot might result in losing what minimal control he still has over the aircraft.
Okay.
Let's keep the seatbelt sign on.
When we disengage the autopilot, we might lose control, so be ready.
Since the autopilot wouldn't react to any input that I make, I was scared if I disengage the autopilot, the aircraft might make a sudden bank to the right that we might not be able to control.
On the count of three, I'll disengage.
One, two, three.
One, two, three.
Nothing happened, and then there was - we were relieved.
I can't turn using the controls.
Looks like the explosion jammed the ailerons.
Dex, what does the QRH say about jammed ailerons? The QRH, or Quick Reference Handbook, is the pilot's bible that lists procedures that must be followed in emergency situation.
Jammed flight controls - use maximum force possible including both pilots if required.
Okay.
Let's force them.
Reyes tries brute force to activate the ailerons, the panels on each wing which turn the aircraft.
Since the explosion, he can only fly straight.
I'm not getting anything from the ailerons.
Can't get off this heading.
Re-engage the autopilot while I work out our options.
It's taking much longer to land than was announced.
TRANSLATOR: We were told it would only be 20 minutes, but it was really one hour before we landed.
It was very frightening.
Although they survived the bombing, passengers are now getting anxious about landing safely at Naha Airport.
Since there was so much time before landing, I started writing a will.
I wrote the will to my son, telling him to be strong.
As PAL 434 looks like missing Naha Airport, Reyes comes up with another plan.
We gotta turn.
We'll have to use differential power.
Disengage auto-throttle, pull back three and four.
Captain Reyes increases thrust to the engines on the left-hand side of the plane and reduces power to the engines on the right.
Very slowly, the aircraft starts to circle right.
He then lowers his speed to make a smaller radius turn.
With guidance from air traffic control, Reyes hopes that the manoeuvre will eventually line up with the runway at Naha.
ED REYES: So, while we were descending on low speed, I tried to test the flight controls and there are some little reactions.
The elevator's beginning to respond.
The elevator is a control that makes the plane ascend and descend.
250 knots.
Flaps one, on speed.
In order to land safely, Reyes will need at least minimal control over the elevator and rudder.
As PAL 434 nears Naha, he continues to reduce his air speed.
Flaps 10, sir.
Speed 225.
Okay, she's turning.
Sir, if we reduce our weight, we can reduce our approach and landing speeds.
Suggest we dump fuel.
Reyes orders the systems engineer to dump 36 tonnes of fuel.
Less fuel means less strain on landing gear and brakes at touchdown.
TRANSLATOR: I was terrified when I saw the smoke trail behind each wing.
I thought something must be burning and there would be another explosion.
As the time to touchdown gets closer, Reyes worries that the bomb may have done more as yet unknown damage to the aircraft.
I'm not certain our landing gear will hold up.
Strap yourself in.
COPILOT: So he talked to the head of the cabin crew and said, "We're not sure if the gears will go down.
"and in case the gears collapse while landing, "be ready to evacuate.
" It's either you make it or you die and that's - well, you cannot do anything anymore.
Runway in sight.
With only minimal control over the aircraft, Reyes faces the most challenging landing of his career.
The gears were supposed to come down a few seconds, but that was the longest second .
.
because we were waiting for the greens to come on.
Take a long time.
It took a long - it was a long few seconds until when it locked.
- Three green, sir.
- Okay.
I'm disconnecting the autopilot and landing manually.
Okay, Dex? Monitor my descent rate, core altitude and speed - flaps 30.
- Okay, 500 feet, on course.
- Flap 30, set.
Help with the elevator.
When I say push, I want you to push.
- Okay, 200, slightly left.
- Correcting.
Push.
- Power off.
- Pull! Your last command was "Pull!" Yeah.
The last one was "Pull!" I made sure that they were closed because he might keep go around and I would make sure that we would stay on the ground.
(laughs with relief) APPLAUSE (exhales loudly) Ladies and gentleman, this is the captain speaking, We would like to thank you for your cooperation and your patience.
Emergency crews are on their way.
We'll try and get you out of here as soon as possible.
Thank you.
SIRENS BLARE The Philippine Airline's 747 is now a crime scene under Japanese jurisdiction.
As investigators from the Okinawa police department set out to solve the mystery of what happened, they turn their attention first to the dead man in seat 26K.
The forensic pathologist recovered 94 fragments embedded in Ikegami's buttocks by the explosion.
He'd suffered severe internal injuries and massive loss of blood.
But tragic as it was, the effects of the explosion could have been much worse.
Ikegami's body bore the brunt of the upward blast, but the explosion severed the steel cables in the ceiling that controlled the rudder and elevator.
The charge also severed the copilot's control cable to the right aileron, one of the control surfaces on the wing which make an aircraft bank and turn.
The Okinawa forensic investigators immediately start work collecting evidence from the bomb site.
They begin with the largest fragments of debris and then systematically work down until the smallest particles are retrieved by vacuum cleaner.
Japanese investigators cannot identify the bomb's detonator.
But by separating out bits of metal, plastic and electrical wire that do not belong the plane, components of the bomb are pieced together.
One forensic investigator is able to identify the bomb's timer.
By reconstituting dozens of burnt fragments, he discovers it's a modified digital wristwatch.
Investigators also discover that one of the bomb's nine-volt batteries is only sold in the Philippines.
It's another clue that suggests that the bomber could be based there.
Philippine National Police Deputy Chief Sonny Razon is on the case.
SONNY RAZON: In the later part of 1994 we already started to receive information, intelligence reports, that there were Middle Eastern personalities that were here already in the Philippines.
On the night of 6 January, 1995, almost four weeks after the bombing of PAL 434, the Philippine police get a lucky break.
In his Manila apartment, the PAL 434 bomber has enlisted the help of an accomplice to mass-produce his new undetectable bomb.
(both speak in foreign language) An attempt to burn off chemicals gets out of hand.
Acrid-smelling smoke spills out of the apartment.
It attracts the attention of the doorman, who comes to investigate.
- What's going on? - Sorry.
We playing with some fireworks.
But we put them out and we have the windows open inside and we keep the door closed.
- It'll be fine.
Okay? - Oh, you open the door.
But if we open the door, the smoke come out here.
Closed, it goes through the window.
Okay? It's okay.
It's okay.
Until the smoke dissipates, the bombers decide to wait outside the apartment.
The doorman isn't convinced by their "playing with fireworks" story, and he calls the fire department and the police.
By the time the firemen come, the smoke is gone and they leave after a quick check.
The bomber now realises he's left a very sensitive item in the apartment and he persuades his friend to retrieve his laptop.
He was too clever a guy to come back and expose himself because all along he knew that that would be too risky, for him to go back and be caught.
The bomber's fear of getting caught is justified.
Once Police Inspector Ada Farascal learns that they're from Pakistan, she insists on seeing their room for herself.
The police in Manila are on high alert due to a planned visit by the Pope in a few days.
What Inspector Farascal finds confirms her worst fears about the intentions of the tenants.
PHONE RINGS MAN: You! Stop! (screams) The shot distracts the apprentice and he trips over a fallen palm tree.
But the cop discovers he has no handcuffs.
The doorman improvises with the drawstrings of his windbreaker.
In the meantime, the bomber vanishes.
One of the first senior officers to arrive at his apartment is Sonny Razon.
The incident at the apartment was the breakthrough in opening our eyes that the al-Qaeda terrorist cell was already operating here in the Philippines.
The Philippine National Police know they've stumbled onto something big, and they inform Interpol, Scotland Yard and the FBI.
When news of the raid reaches the Joint Terrorism Taskforce in New York it immediately grabs the attention of FBI Special Agent Frank Pellegrino.
For two years, he has been hunting a terrorist called Ramzi Yousef and it looks as if this might be his man.
Well, he was always our focus since '93, and at the time, he was the biggest fugitive around.
As Philippine police comb through the apartment, they begin to find more evidence tying Yousef to the bombing of PAL 434.
The identification of the bomber of PAL 434 and the discovery of his bomb factory is very disturbing news for those responsible for airline passenger safety.
Ramzi Yousef is an international terrorist who knows how to get his bombs past airport security.
Bombs that are small, but if strategically located can blow up a jumbo jet, and kill not just one, but hundreds of people.
And the bomber of PAL 434 is still on the loose.
Ramzi Yousef is just one of several aliases of a man who tops the FBI's most wanted list - an international terrorist with a $2 million bounty on his head.
Yousef, whose real name is probably Abdul Karim Basit, was born and raised in Kuwait, where his father worked as an engineer.
It was there that he met the friend that he enlisted to help him in the Manila bomb factory.
When he was 18, Yousef's family returned to their Pakistan homeland.
Yousef married and had two children.
CHANTING In September 1992, Yousef flies from Pakistan to New York to prepare for a major terrorist attack.
On arrival at JFK he presents a fake Iraqi passport and asks for political asylum from Saddam Hussein.
The ploy works and he's allowed to enter the country.
Six months later, on 26 February 1993, one of the largest homemade bombs in American history explodes in the garage below the World Trade Center, killing six people, injuring hundreds and causing $500 million worth of damage.
That night, Yousef was on a plane back to his home in Pakistan.
He was an action figure.
He wanted to keep doing things.
He wasn't happy with the one success he had.
18 months after the World Trade Center attack, Yousef flies to Manila to fine-tune the bomb that he plants on PAL 434.
According to Sonny Razon, the Philippine capital suits him.
Ramzi Yousef loves to enjoy life.
He was a - he is a ladies' man.
He associated himself with a lot of girlfriends and he liked to party.
After the bombing of PAL 434, Yousef arranges for his childhood friend, Abdul Hakim Murad, to assist him in Manila.
But on 6 January 1995, two weeks after his arrival, Murad is arrested and sent to the Philippine police headquarters for interrogation.
It took 67 days to extract the details of how Yousef planted the bomb.
My impressions of him were that he was strong-willed, he was determined.
Initially he did not break down in questioning.
And it was only when the FBI team came in and provided us with additional information - pieces of the puzzle that we did not have - that he started to talk.
Tiny chemical traces of the explosive were found on PAL 434, and Murad eventually admits that Yousef uses liquid nitroglycerin that he stabilised and concealed in a bottle of contact lens solution.
Murad also reveals that Yousef hid the bomb's potentially suspicious components in the heel of his shoes.
Most airport security systems only detect metal above the ankles.
I bet you he was as cool as can be, that he was somewhat cavalier in his attitude towards these explosives and chemicals.
To carry a container of nitroglycerin on an aeroplane .
.
it'd be a little nuts.
Murad's confession provides details of Yousef's actions after he successfully got the bomb components past airport security.
Can I get you some juice or coffee? Juice, please.
Yousef designed the device so the innocent-looking components can be quickly transformed into a lethal bomb.
Yousef has modified a digital wristwatch as the bomb's timer.
This is wired to a detonator inside the bottle of nitroglycerin.
Two nine-volt batteries provide an additional electric charge to the exposed filament of a light bulb that will spark the explosion.
Yousef sets the alarm for four hours later when he anticipates the plane will be flying high over the Pacific Ocean.
Yousef plants the bomb in a life vest pouch under his seat, a place ground crews are unlikely to inspect during the stopover in Cebu.
Soon after, he gets off the plane and disappears.
Four hours later, the time bomb under seat 26K .
.
awakes the airline industry to a new kind of terrorism.
PANICKED SCREAMING Murad's confession confirms Pellegrino's suspicions.
This is just the kind of sophisticated plot he has come to expect from Ramzi Yousef.
But Pellegrino is still shocked by what Murad says next.
PAL 434 was only a test - a dry run for a much larger terrorist plot that will kill thousands of airline passengers.
A highly-skilled terrorist, Ramzi Yousef, has already set off a new type of bomb on an aircraft.
Now the FBI discovers Yousef wants to blow up more planes .
.
and he continues to evade capture.
FBI investigators find evidence of Yousef's meticulous planning on secret files on the laptop that he so desperately wanted his accomplice to retrieve.
On the laptop computer found in Yousef's apartment building was a file which laid out a plan for five individuals, using code names - individuals were not mentioned on the plan - to board about three planes each.
Two planes, a couple of people had three planes, planting bombs on the planes and then returning back to their home, hoping when they planted the bombs and with the timing devices, if everything went well, all bombs would go off within about a six-hour time period.
Any more than one would have been an airline disaster.
Um, so, you know, if they were 50% successful in their plan, I think it would have scared a lot of people for a long time.
The file on Yousef's laptop reveals that the plan, code-named Bojinka, is foiled with no time to spare.
The bombing of 12 American planes is meant to kill 4,000 passengers.
Yousef's campaign of terror against the airlines is scheduled to start less than two weeks after the bust of his bomb factory in Manila.
By the time Pellegrino and the FBI team arrive in the Philippines, Yousef is long gone.
So it was a worry and it was a missed opportunity.
But we also, in a lot of these fugitive-type cases .
.
you know, we're all not that different and everybody goes home.
Everybody needs to go home.
So the investigation again would focus back to Pakistan.
The FBI immediately begin a publicity campaign in Pakistan, promoting their $2 million reward for assistance in arresting Yousef.
The strategy works.
Yousef's latest recruit for yet another airline bombing blows the whistle.
On the day Yousef is due to leave his hotel in Islamabad, a Pakistani SWAT team moves in.
(speaks foreign language) In Yousef's room are Delta and United Airlines flight schedules, as well as bomb components hidden in children's toys.
Who are you? Do you have a warrant? The informer receives the $2 million bounty for the tip-off which prevents yet another airline attack.
He was shocked.
He did not think he would be caught.
He had a certain confidence about him and I don't think he thought we'd ever catch up to him.
Within hours of his capture, Yousef is extradited from Pakistan and put on a waiting US government plane.
With the cooperation of the Japanese and Philippine governments, the FBI arranged for Yousef to stand trial in New York City for the PAL 434 bombing, as well as the earlier 1993 attack on the World Trade Center.
NEWSREADER: In a convoy of federal and local patrol cars, Ramzi Ahmed Yousef was brought into New York City late Wednesday night, ending a worldwide manhunt.
He was arrested Tuesday in Pakistan by Pakistani authorities and brought back by the FBI on a US plane, then into custody with heavy security on the street, in case of any terrorist attacks prompted by his arrest.
SIRENS WAIL At his trial a year later, in New York's Southern District Court, Yousef decides to handle his own defence, against the advice of the judge.
He performs better than expected, but he is found guilty on all charges related to the bombing of PAL 434 and conspiring to bomb 12 American passenger planes.
Yousef is also found guilty in a second trial for the World Trade Center bombing.
In his final summing up, Yousef justifies his actions.
Yes, I am a terrorist and proud of it.
And I only support terrorism so long as it's against the United States government and against Israel, because you are more than terrorists.
Although Pakistani, Yousef describes himself as Palestinian by choice.
And he justifies the PAL 434 and World Trade Center bombings as punishment for a US foreign policy that favours Israel over Palestine.
.
.
and hypocrites! GAVEL SOUNDS For both crimes, he's sentenced to 240 years in prison.
The judge recommends solitary confinement for life in the most secure prison in the United States, located in Florence, Colorado.
It houses the country's most violent and dangerous prisoners and it's where Yousef will spend the rest of his life, confined in a cell for up to 23 out of every 24 hours.
We cannot afford to just sit down and count our victories with the arrest of Ramzi Yousef.
Somebody else has already replaced him and somebody else is already thinking of how to circumvent these security measures that we put up.
In the year following Yousef's attack on PAL 434, the Federal Aviation Administration certified a machine to detect explosives.
Not one American carrier bought it.
Only after 9/11 was a law passed that required US airports to deploy explosive detection systems.
But the most reliable models are expensive, or too slow, and still not widely employed.
It's the old saying - we have to be right 100% of the time.
A terrorist only has to be right once.
Although there hasn't been a successful airliner bombing since PAL 434, those who forget the past may be destined to revisit it.

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