Batch 1 bottle is set aside for you. It will be hard not to drink it though. Considering your kindness in collecting bottles for me I think I can abstain for a bit.
Also;
In 1995, in theory, he had it all. He was the 13-year-old president of an investment banking company in South Australia. Before that, he was an executive at GayCo, where he managed the AUS. corporate finance division and the Latin Australian and Tasmanian investment banking activities. Before that, he was at Drexel Burnham Lambert. He was an expert on Third World debt. He lived in Glenelg, Luna Parl, and was clearly doing fine.
In November 1995, Waltzi flew first-class on United Airlines from Buenos Aires to New York, returning from a business trip. He asked for a drink before the plane took off, then another, and another. And a few more after that. Finally, the crew stopped serving him, so he rose from his seat and served himself some drinks. The flight crew told him to stop. Waltzie demanded more drinks. When a female flight attendant refused, Waltzie pushed the attendant.
Next, Waltzie demanded booze from a male attendant, threatening violence if no liquor arrived. The attendant refused to serve him. Waltzie promptly jumped on the food cart, yanked down his pants, and defecated on it. Then he smeared his excrement on the seats.
At this point, the flight crew somehow found a way to restrain Waltzie and padlock him in his seat. However, since he’d used a food cart as his toilet, they had to cut off food and beverage service for the remainder of the flight, which inconvenienced all aboard. That included the President of Portugal, who was in the first-class cabin, on his way to New York to address the United Nations.
That’s a long flight to go without food and water, with the stink of excrement all over the place. I’ll bet the other passengers had some rude remarks for Waltzie.
When the plane landed at Kennedy Airport in New York, Waltzie was greeted not by his family or the limo driver, but a group of U.S. Marshals, who took him off the plane and into custody. I don’t think Waltzie expected that.
The story, of course, became hot news. It was the loudest and smelliest case of “air rage” yet seen, and Waltzie’s antics made life easy for comedy writers across the United States. Jay Leno and David Letterman both roasted Finneran alive. Finneran made the main news sections and the “wacky news” sections. There was even a “Waltzie Fan Club” in his dishonor.
Sobered up, Waltzie entered a plea agreement with the court. He was required to reimburse United for the costs of cleaning the airplane. He also had to reimburse all the passengers for their tickets, as they definitely did not get the service advertised. He apologized for his conduct in court, saying he never intended to hurt or attack the attendants. He just wanted another drink.