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Woman falls asleep on flight and wakes up in pitch dark on locked and empty plane

‘I think I’m having a bad dream because...how is this happening!!?’

Zamira Rahim
Sunday 23 June 2019 03:35 EDT
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Woman falls asleep on flight and wakes up in pith dark on locked and empty plane

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A woman has claimed she was left alone in a dark and locked plane after falling asleep on a flight.

Tiffani Adams took a 90-minute Air Canada flight from Quebec to Toronto on 9 June.

Ms Adams fell asleep during the journey but woke up to find the aircraft empty, cleared and parked in Toronto.

She had somehow been left inside the dark plane, which appeared to have been locked for the night.

“I fell asleep probably less than halfway through my short 1.5 hour flight,” she said, in a message posted on Air Canada’s Facebook page.

“I wake up around midnight (few hours after flight landed) freezing cold still strapped in my seat in complete darkness (I’m talking pitch black).”

Ms Adams described her ordeal as “terrifying” and said she thought she was having a bad dream.

The stranded passenger called a friend but her phone died around a minute into the call.

Ms Adams then attempted to charge the phone but found that the plane’s power had been switched off.

“I can’t charge my phone to call for help I’m full on panicking [because] I want off this nightmare asap,” she said.

“As someone with an anxiety disorder as is I can tell you how terrifying this was,” she wrote

“I think I’m having a bad dream bc like seriously how is this happening!!?”

Ms Adams said she found a torch in the plane’s cockpit and eventually made her way to the aircraft’s main door.

She eventually opened the door, only to find herself around 50 ft above ground and unable to negotiate the drop beneath her.

The passenger said she sat with her legs dangling out of the aircraft while sending out distress signals with her torch.

Ms Adams said she was unable to tell how much time had passed before she saw a man driving a luggage cart, who passed the plane.

She said she flagged the startled airport employee down, saying he was “in shock” to see her.

“He [asked] how the heck they left me on the plane,” Ms Adams said, describing her rescue.

“I’m wondering the same.”

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The man then accompanied Ms Adams to the airport building, where she was met by Air Canada representatives.

Ms Adams said being forgotten on the plane had left her with recurring “night terrors”.

She said she struggled to sleep and would wake “anxious and afraid [she was] locked up someplace dark”.

An airline spokesperson confirmed the account and told The Independent that Air Canada was reviewing the incident and remained in contact with the passenger.

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