http://www.ticotimes.net/newsbriefs.htm
U.S.-Costa Rican Killed
by Federal Air Marshals
in Miami
By Leland Baxter-Neal
And Rebecca Kimitch
Tico Times Staff
[email protected]
[email protected]
COSTA Rican family members are mourning the death of Rigoberto Alpízar, who was shot at the Miami International Airport in the U.S. state of Florida Wednesday afternoon after allegedly threatening to have a bomb aboard an American Airlines plane.
U.S. air marshals shot and killed Alpízar, 44, near the plane door as he exited the aircraft clutching a backpack and repeating that he had to get off, witnesses told the press. Alpízar was born in Costa Rica but had lived in the United States for nearly two decades.
When I received the news, I lost my breath. I felt like I was going to die, Alpízar's father, Carlos Alpízar, told The Tico Times.
Shortly before the plane's scheduled takeoff, Rigoberto Alpízar ran up the aisle from his seat in the rear of the aircraft and claimed he had a bomb in his bag, according to Federal Air Marshal Service spokesman Dave Adams. Two air marshals confronted Alpízar, who continued to be belligerent, moving towards the officials and refusing to get down as ordered, Adams told The Tico Times. When Alpízar reached into his bag the two officers opened fire, killing him.
Despite the threat, subsequent inspection found no explosives in Alpízar's luggage. Witnesses told various media that his wife, also on board, chased him as he tried to exit, shouting that he was bipolar and had not taken his medication.
The victim was in Miami en route from Ecuador to Orlando, Florida, where he lived with his wife, a U.S. citizen named Anne Buechner, the Associated Press wire service reported. The couple had just transferred to American Airlines Flight 924, which originated in Colombia, for the final leg of their journey.
The couple had been in Peru and Ecuador on a volunteer medical mission where they were translating for Buechner's godfather, a dentist. A witness on their flight from Ecuador told the U.S. news channel CNN that Alpízar's behavior was erratic and flight attendants had problems communicating with him.
Bipolarity is a personality disorder characterized by wild swings between depression to euphoria, and requires regular treatment with prescription drugs, most commonly lithium.
According to Dr. Verónica Castro, a clinical psychologist at the Hospital Clínica Bíblica in San José, Alpízar's behavior could have been a manic episode of bipolar disorder.
Abruptly stopping medication can have very negative consequences, she said.
Castro said that in the euphoric, manic phase of the disorder, patients can lose contact with reality and act out high-risk behaviors that put their own life and others' at risk. In both the manic and depressive states, patients are also at high risk for suicide.
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