View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Hijacker.
Hijacker meaning
Someone who hijacks. | Hijackware.
Synonyms of Hijacker
Example sentences (20)
When you have identified it, you should remove the Yahoo browser hijacker infection and any other infected files.
As the driver and alleged hijacker got out the truck the police officers noticed a 9mm pistol on the floor of the truck.
Once this had been obtained, the hijacker can get control of personal information stored to a SIM card, such as identity, messages and personal security keys – and ultimately steal money.
Transport Department officials said a hostess eventually grappled with the hijacker.
Deteriorated $20 notes, which were found by a boy in Washington in 1980, were thought to be part of the ransom money demanded by the hijacker.
FTFA: All 143 passengers were evacuated before commandos took out the hijacker and no injuries were reported.
Last year, the Guardian reported that bin-Laden’s half-brothers said he may be married to the daughter of lead 9/11 hijacker Mohammed Atta.
ALEXANDRA – Five year jail time for injured hijacker.
They went right to the first hijacker on the tape and identified him.
Tshabalala shot his 16-year-old son, Luyanda, outside the Fred Norman Secondary School on Tuesday after mistaking him for a hijacker.
A second later, a hijacker said, "Pull it down!
At 10:02 am, a hijacker ordered, "Pull it down!
Dahl continued to struggle in the cockpit, refusing to allow a hijacker to deactivate the autopilot so he could fly the plane manually.
Hazmi was initially dismissed as a "muscle hijacker" following the attacks, but was later revealed to have played a larger role in the operational planning than previously believed.
His involvement was quickly ruled out; but a local reporter named James Long, rushing to meet an imminent deadline, confused the eliminated suspect's name with the pseudonym used by the hijacker.
Jarrah apparently entered the United States on seven separate occasions, more than any other hijacker.
Mistaken identity claims There have been claims that Jarrah was not a hijacker or that he was not present on the plane and his identity was stolen.
One of the first was an Oregon man with a minor police record named D. B. Cooper, contacted by Portland police on the off-chance that the hijacker had used his real name, or the same alias in a previous crime.
Other circumstantial evidence includes testimony that Cook claims to have obtained from William Mitchell, a passenger on the hijacked aircraft, regarding a mysterious "physical detail" (which he will not divulge) common to the hijacker and Gossett.
The calls also indicated that one of the men had tied a box around his torso, and claimed there was a bomb inside - it is not known which hijacker this was.