
An anonymous man and his young son are being hailed as ‘heroes’ for intervening in a ‘violent’ outbreak which prevented a plane from being diverted
Olivia Bridge Reporter in Live News Network
09:07, 29 Apr 2026
The chaos erupted on a Jet2 flight(Image: PA)
A man is praising the actions of a mystery man and his young son after the pair sprung into action to stop a plane from being diverted.
The Manchester-bound Jet2 flight LS1004, which left Izmir, Turkey, on Friday (April 25), descended into chaos as a rowdy passenger allegedly turned ‘violent’ after being refused alcohol.
Passengers aboard the jet are now applauding a man and his eight-year-old son for their ‘heroic’ actions as they stepped in to calm the situation.
According to John Henderson, 47, cabin crew were minutes away from diverting the jet after a woman became “violent” as whisky was confiscated off her.
He explained how the jet had been due to depart at 8pm but was 50 minutes late as around 20 passengers were transferred from another flight as it had been cancelled following a separate incident with a disruptive passenger, reports the Manchester Evening News.
From his seat in row two, he said he witnessed the incident unfold at around 30 minutes into the Manchester-bound flight, shortly after the first drinks service started at about 9.25pm.
“She was already drinking her own alcohol when the stewardess came round,” Mr Henderson said. “They told her, ‘you can’t have that, we sell alcohol and you’ve had too much’, and confiscated her bottle of whisky.
“She then just erupted, calling them names, being violent towards them. It was a really bad situation.”
Cabin crew had warned the woman the aircraft would be diverted if she did not calm down and contacted the cockpit to alert the pilot. At that stage, a man sitting in row five asked the crew if he could intervene and speak to the woman.
“He said, ‘please just give me 30 seconds’,” Mr Henderson said. “The stewardess said no, we have to divert this plane.”
The man then arranged for the disruptive passenger to sit beside him, swapping seats with another traveller. For the remaining three and a half hours of the flight, he stayed with her, talking and attempting to keep her calm.
“He listened to her, he talked to her, he was completely in control of the whole situation,” John said.
“The stewardesses couldn’t thank him enough. They kept on saying ‘you don’t know how much money you’ve saved Jet2 here’.”
Mr Henderson said the man’s young son also played a key role. “It wasn’t just him, it was his eight-year-old son. He was talking to the lady as well, trying to help his dad calm her down,” he said.
“He was getting out football cards, constantly in conversation with her. When his dad went to the toilet, we asked him, ‘are you ok?’ and he said, ‘I’m just helping my dad’.”
John described the young boy as an “absolute superstar” and said the moment was emotional to witness. Many passengers had feared the plane was moments from being diverted, with the crew saying they had been “within seconds” of doing so.
“There were people on that plane who had already been diverted once before for a rowdy passenger,” Mr Henderson said. “No one wants that again. Without him, God knows where we would be.”
The flight continued to Manchester, where police were waiting on arrival to meet the disruptive passenger. Mr Henderson said the pilot personally thanked the man as he disembarked the plane.
“He was waiting on the stairs and shook his hand,” he said. “He said, ‘you don’t understand what you’ve done here tonight you’ve been brilliant’ and thanked him for what he’d done for the airline.”
Passengers applauded and congratulated the man but he left without giving his name.
“He just got his bag and walked off into the night,” Mr Henderson said. “No one got a picture, no one got his name. Everyone was asking, ‘who is he?’ but he just disappeared.”
Mr Henderson said the man had cut short a holiday in Turkey and was travelling home with his son to see a sick relative, giving him added urgency to avoid a diversion.
“For me personally, he got me home so I could see my sick father,” he said. “There were other people with medical needs as well.
“The reason he was doing what he was doing was because he was going through tough family times himself.”
He added: “You don’t see people like that. It restored our faith in people, someone helping a stranger like that, completely selfless.
“I just want to say thank you, not just to him, but to his son as well. They kept that plane in the air so people like me could get home for urgent personal reasons.”
Greater Manchester Police have said they attended but no crimes were reported.





