On March 24, 2008, a
US Airways FFDO's gun went off on Flight 1536 from
Denver to
Charlotte. No one was injured and the aircraft landed safely. According to the FFDO, the gun fired while he was trying to stow it. The bullet went through the side of the cockpit and tore a small hole in the exterior of the plane. The plane was pulled from service for repairs. On January 13, 2011, a
JetBlue FFDO's bag carrying his gun was accidentally picked up by a passenger flying to
West Palm Beach, Florida. When the passenger realized the bag wasn't hers, she notified a flight attendant. The FFDO's firearm was appropriately locked and secured and could not have been accessed or fired even if found. In June 2015, a
United Airlines FFDO threw live ammunition in the trash before eventually deciding to flush it down the lavatory toilet on an international flight from
Houston to
Munich. In February 2017, a
Southwest Airlines FFDO disembarked a plane in
Phoenix, Arizona, leaving a loaded firearm unattended in the cockpit, after the FFDO was accused by a flight attendant of watching footage from a camera hidden in the airplane's lavatory. In August 2022, a
Delta Air Lines FFDO allegedly used his firearm to assault and intimidate a fellow crew member in response to a possible diversion of the aircraft due to a medical situation. In January 2025,
PSA Airlines FFDO Jonathan Campos was killed in the line of duty in
a midair collision on final approach to
Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in
Washington, D.C. His is the first and only line of duty death of an FFDO. ==References==