Air India Flight 182 Bombing
Air India Flight 182 Bombing occurred in Atlantic Ocean (en route) on June 23, 1985. This entry is included for awareness and remembrance, and to support prevention-forward learning in transit and related settings. Where available, key facts below summarize the incident and highlight lessons for early reporting, protective action, and system-level readiness.
Air India Flight 182 Bombing occurred in Atlantic Ocean (en route) on June 23, 1985. This entry is included for awareness and remembrance, and to support prevention-forward learning in transit and related settings. Where available, key facts below summarize the incident and highlight lessons for early reporting, protective action, and system-level readiness.
- Escalating grievance or fixation tied to a person, place, ideology, or perceived injustice.
- Leakage: statements of intent, threats, or ominous communications that merit documentation and follow-up.
- Preparation behaviors: access-seeking, planning, acquisition, testing, rehearsal, or sudden "energy burst".
Deeper access
Start with the public overview, then go deeper into context, analysis, and real-world application.
Go beyond awareness with Practitioner Access for deeper context and analysis, or choose Advanced Access for application, training, and team use.
Tier B Practitioner Access
Unlock deeper context around the event, warning signs, and prevention takeaways.
- Normalize early reporting: make it easy to share concerns (anonymous options, clear points of contact).
- Track patterns, not single incidents: repeated leakage, fixation, grievances, or boundary testing deserve attention.
- Use multidisciplinary review: ensure security, HR/student affairs, mental health, and leadership share context.
- Practice communication: define who sends alerts, what language is used, and what 'protective action' means on-site.
Tier C Practitioner Access
Unlock behavioral analysis and pathway-to-violence interpretation for a more structured view.
- Pathway-to-violence framing: consider grievance development, ideation, research/planning, and preparation behaviors.
- Warning behavior mapping: look for leakage, fixation, identification, novel aggression, and energy burst indicators (where documented).
- System vulnerabilities: access pathways, surveillance gaps, communication latency, and role ambiguity during fast-moving events.
- Missed intervention opportunities: document points where reporting, policy, or supervision could have changed the trajectory.
Tier D Advanced Access
Unlock the application layer for training, prevention planning, and real-world team use.
- Missed intervention opportunities and decision points
- Questions for multidisciplinary review or tabletop discussion
- What teams should be alert for in similar settings today
- Practical connections to policy, reporting, and structured assessment