Three Minnesotans aboard two Delta Air Lines flights from Amsterdam on Sunday bit into turkey sandwiches that contained inch-long needles, prompting an international investigation led by the FBI.
Jim Tonjes of Plymouth and Jack Drogt of St. Paul say they found the sewing-like needles in sandwiches on their flight to Minneapolis. Tonjes said he bit on the needle, which punctured the roof of his mouth.
Drogt's 16-year-old son, William, who was on a flight to Atlanta, also found a needle in his turkey sandwich. Two other needles were found, one on a second flight to Atlanta and one on a flight to Seattle, the airline said.
Tonjes, 57, of Plymouth, said his flight was about 90 minutes out of Minneapolis when he took a bite out of his sandwich and felt a sharp poke in his mouth.
"I figured it might be a toothpick," he said. Instead, he pulled out a 1-inch needle that had punctured the roof of his mouth. "It looked like a sewing needle but without an eye. ... I was in shock. I thought, 'Oh, my God.' It's the last thing you expect in a sandwich."
Once the plane landed in Minneapolis, Tonjes said, an ambulance was going to be summoned to take him to the hospital. But he shrugged that off and promised that he would go to the emergency room on his own after federal authorities interviewed him for three hours.
"It was the FBI and then someone else would come in and flash a badge. And then someone else would come in."
Tonjes then spent another three hours being examined in a hospital emergency room. "I'm on strong medication for a month and will be monitored for up to 90 days for viral diseases -- hepatitis and HIV," Tonjes said. The FBI also will be testing the needles for contamination.