How a Fake Boarding Pass Got One Man Past TSA and Onto a Full United Flight

How a Fake Boarding Pass Got One Man Past TSA and Onto a Full United Flight

BY COLLIN SMITS Published 22 hours ago 0 COMMENTS

A man boarded a United Airlines flight at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston using what authorities describe as a fake boarding pass, only to be discovered hiding in a lavatory as the aircraft taxied toward the runway. The breach has prompted questions about gate security and the procedures airlines use to verify passengers before departure.

 

According to reports from Simple Flying and NBC News, the incident occurred on United Airlines Flight 469, bound for Los Angeles International Airport. As reported by Fox 26 Houston, court documents have identified 25-year-old Abdulrahman Oluwatumike Oriyomi as the suspect. 

 

Photo: AeroXplorer / Dalton Hoch

 

How the Breach Happened

 

Investigators say the man approached the gate while agents were occupied with other tasks and managed to walk down the jet bridge without his boarding pass being scanned. Court documents indicate that gate staff were distracted at the moment he passed through, allowing him to board the aircraft alongside legitimate ticketed passengers.

 

Once on board, the man initially sat down in an empty aisle seat before slipping into a lavatory when the rightful passenger arrived to claim it. As the plane began to pull away from the gate, another passenger alerted flight attendants that someone was in the lavatory.

 

The crew alerted the flight deck, and the captain made the decision to return to the gate. Law enforcement officers boarded the aircraft and removed the man without further incident.

 

Federal Charges Filed

 

Oriyomi was charged in Harris County, Texas with felony impairment or interruption of a critical infrastructure facility. According to court documents, Oriyomi had actually made a reservation for the flight, but it was never ticketed. He gave a false name — 'Mr. Lopez' — to flight attendants when questioned on board.

 

Authorities have not indicated that the man posed any threat beyond the unauthorized boarding itself. He had passed through Transportation Security Administration screening before reaching the gate, meaning he had been checked for prohibited items even though he lacked a valid ticket for the flight in question. How he cleared the initial TSA checkpoint without a proper boarding pass remains under review.

 

Photo: AeroXplorer / Thomas Tse

 

Questions About Gate Procedures

 

The episode has drawn attention to the final layer of identity and ticket verification that takes place at the boarding gate. Airlines rely on gate agents to scan each passenger's boarding pass against the flight manifest before allowing them down the jet bridge. When that scan fails to occur, no automated system catches the discrepancy until a head count is conducted on the aircraft.

 

United Airlines confirmed the incident and stated that it is cooperating with federal investigators. The carrier indicated that it is reviewing its boarding procedures at the Houston hub to determine how the breach occurred and what changes may be needed to prevent similar incidents.

 

Aviation security analysts note that while stowaway cases on commercial flights are rare, they do happen periodically. In most instances, the individual is caught before the aircraft leaves the gate, as was the case in Houston. The bigger concern, experts say, is what such breaches reveal about gaps between TSA screening and airline-controlled boarding.

 

 

Industry Response

 

The TSA has also acknowledged the incident and indicated it would examine the screening records at the checkpoint the man used. The agency typically requires a boarding pass and government-issued identification to clear security, and any failure in that process would represent a separate concern from the gate breach.

 

For United, the incident comes at a time when major U.S. carriers are under heightened scrutiny over operational reliability and customer service issues. A security lapse of this kind adds another layer of complexity for an airline working to maintain public confidence at one of its largest hubs.

 

The suspect remains in custody pending further court proceedings. If convicted of the felony charge of impairing or interrupting a critical infrastructure facility, he faces possible imprisonment and fines under Texas state law. The investigation into how he managed to slip past multiple checkpoints continues, with findings expected to inform updates to procedures at George Bush Intercontinental Airport and potentially across the United Airlines network.

 

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Collin Smits
Aviation Photographer and Writer/Editor, Mechanical Engineering Student

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