Man climbs fence at Phoenix airport, runs to plane

PHOENIX (AP) - Two men were arrested Christmas Day on opposite sides of the country after they breached perimeters at major airports, raising questions about security measures and whether more needs to be done to protect the nation's transit hubs.

Robert Edward Bump, 49, scaled a roughly 9-foot, barbed wire topped fence at about 5:30 p.m. at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport before running out onto the tarmac and banging on the engine of an arriving Southwest Airlines plane.

He was arrested a few minutes later after another pilot spotted him and alerted the tower, Phoenix police spokesman Officer James Holmes said.

No injuries were reported, and Holmes said passengers were never in danger.

In New Jersey, a man was arrested Wednesday after authorities found him on the tarmac of Newark Liberty Airport. It's not clear how Siyah Bryant, 24, of Jersey City, ended up on the tarmac. A phone number for Bryant, who is charged with trespassing, couldn't be located.

In Phoenix, authorities immediately alerted the pilot of the Southwest Airlines plane, who shut down his engines as Bump approached, airport spokeswoman Deborah Ostreicher said.

Surveillance video shows the man being surrounded by airport security vehicles as he wandered away from the plane with his arms outstretched as if he were flying. A police officer arrived soon after and arrested him.

Bump showed signs of drug and alcohol impairment and was booked on a misdemeanor charge of entering a restricted area at the airport, said Holmes, adding that the man didn't explain to authorities during questioning why he did it.

Security on the airport's runway system has been breached in the past.

The Transportation Security Administration doesn't require airports to maintain full-time surveillance of their perimeter fences, leaving airport security largely in the hands of individual facilities.

Jeff Price, an aviation professor at the Metropolitan State University of Denver and former assistant security director at Denver International Airport, said perimeter intrusion detection systems might be needed at the nation's larger airports as an extra layer, given their prominence and volume of passengers.

Still, installing such a detection system is no guarantee that breaches will be avoided. "There's no such thing as airtight security," Price said.

Price said it looked as though people working in the airport tower did as they were supposed to by responding quickly. While perimeter fences are a key part of airport security, Price said an airport relies on many layers of security, including workers required to challenge and report people on air fields who don't have security badges.

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