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Flights back to normal after LAX snafu

Weekend glitch left thousands trapped on planes, stuck in terminal

Image: Waiting through glitch
Dan Steinberg / AP
Salvador Guerrero waits for his wife to exit customs at LAX after a computer failure by customs and border protection left about 17,000 passengers stranded on airplanes and in terminals on Saturday.
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'Absolutely unprecedented'
Aug. 12: Federal officials are trying to find the cause of a computer glitch that left thousands stranded in Los Angeles' airport. NBC's Jinah Kim reports.

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updated 10:43 a.m. ET Aug. 13, 2007

LOS ANGELES - A computer failure that left thousands of travelers trapped on planes and stuck for hours in the terminal at Los Angeles International Airport was fixed, and flights were back to normal Monday.

International flights were arriving on time and travelers coming to the U.S. were making it smoothly through the airport’s checkpoints, said U.S. Customs and Border Protection spokesman Mike Fleming.

The computer malfunction, which began at 2 p.m. Saturday and lasted nearly 10 hours, prevented authorities from screening passengers arriving in the U.S. It delayed more than 17,000 people arriving from overseas.

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Fleming said a computer switch failed, which knocked down the entire communications system. A backup system was in place, but it was accessible only to customs officers in some of the lanes where passengers were being processed, creating huge bottlenecks.

“We’ve had outages in the past, but they haven’t taken nearly as long to resolve,” Fleming said. “This was unprecedented in terms of impact.”

During the outage, passengers were kept on planes after the terminals that normally accept international travelers became full because the previous arrivals couldn’t be processed.

Though the entire system was up and running by 11:45 p.m. Saturday, it took officials until around 4 a.m. Sunday to finish processing the backlog of incoming passengers, Fleming said.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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