A United Airlines flight bound for Spain was forced to make a mid-Atlantic U-turn after a passenger’s named Bluetooth device triggered a full-scale security emergency.
NEWARK, NJ — United Airlines Flight UA236, a Boeing 767-400ER, departed Newark Liberty International Airport (EWR) at 5:58 PM on Saturday, May 30, 2026, heading for Palma de Mallorca, Spain. However, roughly an hour and a half into the transatlantic journey, a routine flight dissolved into confusion for the passengers on board.
According to passengers sharing their experiences on social media, flight attendants suddenly took to the PA system with an urgent command: all passengers were ordered to turn off their Bluetooth connections immediately.
The “One-Minute Warning”
The crew issued multiple increasingly tense announcements, stating that the directive came straight from United’s corporate headquarters in Chicago. Crew members warned that if the active Bluetooth signals were not disabled, the plane would be forced to turn around.
“They repeated the instruction multiple times, eventually giving a final ‘one-minute warning,'” said a passenger to AIRLIVE. “They said an individual has done something with Bluetooth that is threatening to the safety of the flight.”
Despite the warnings, at least two active Bluetooth devices remained on. The crew could not risk continuing across the ocean with an unresolved threat.
While cruising at 32,000 feet over the Atlantic Ocean, the pilots made the definitive call to abort the route. They declared an emergency by inputting a “squawk 7700” transponder code (signaling a general emergency to air traffic control) and were quickly vectored back toward New York.
An Incredibly Foolish “Joke”
The panic subsided into frustration once the true nature of the threat came to light. The emergency wasn’t sparked by a technical glitch or a cyberattack, but rather by an incredibly reckless prank.
LiveATC.net audio archives from the Newark ramp and company frequencies later confirmed that a passenger (reported to be a 16-year-old boy) had customized the discoverable network name of his personal Bluetooth speaker to read “BOMB”. Because Bluetooth signals broadcast to any nearby smartphones or laptops looking to pair, the name popped up on the screens of passengers and crew members inside the cabin, instantly triggering a standard bomb-threat protocol.
Ground Response and Security Sweep
The aircraft landed safely back at Newark Liberty International Airport, where it was met by a massive law enforcement presence, including airport police and federal agents.
Passengers were deplaned with only their passports and phones, loaded onto buses, and driven around the tarmac for roughly an hour while security personnel secured the gate. To ensure the offending device hadn’t been discarded or passed off, all passengers were required to clear TSA airport security a second time while the aircraft and checked luggage underwent a thorough sweep.
United Airlines has not yet released an official statement regarding potential criminal charges or lifetime bans for the teenager involved. Passengers, while relieved to be safe, expressed immense frustration over the multi-hour ordeal, with one traveler summing up the cabin’s collective mood online: “This little joke ruined it for everyone.”
