If an airline attendant dislikes a passenger they could end up on the terrorist watch list.
The Supreme Court on Monday declined to interrupt a group's lawsuit against Alaska Airlines, which allegedly booted them off their flight without cause and then reported them to a terrorism task force.
A harried Alaska Airlines flight attendant removed nine first-class passengers, all Egyptians traveling together along with one Brazilian fiancée, for getting "out of control" as they traveled from Vancouver to Las Vegas for a convention. Their only crime seems to have been getting on the airline worker's bad side by trying to stretch during the flight.
One first-class passenger, who was not part of the group, testified that the flight attendants treated the Egyptians badly. When one of the Egyptians got up to stretch and was told to sit down, which he did, the attendant allegedly kept complaining about his standing. When he told her, "I am sitting," she handed him a passenger in-flight disturbance card to fill out, the witness claimed. Flight attendants are supposed to fill out such cards themselves.
The attendant allegedly became increasingly hostile toward the group. After trying to talk to her, the international passengers all fell silent while she yelled at them. She then called the cockpit and told the pilot, Capt. Michel Swanigan, to land the plane because she had "lost control of the first-class cabin."
TSA and the police were waiting when the plane landed in Reno. The flight attendant and pilot demanded that the group be arrested, but they were not. Instead, they were allowed to continue to Las Vegas on another airline, even after the attendant called the other airline and asked that the group not be allowed to fly.
In addition to missing their business meetings in Las Vegas, the group later had their mug shots taken and faced questioning by the FBI, which responded to the airline's report to the Joint Terrorism Task Force.
The ousted passengers sued Alaska Airlines for defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress and violations of international flight rules over the ordeal.
U.S. District Judge Robert Jones in Nevada ruled that the crew had acted within its discretion when it removed the passengers and tried to have them arrested. Jones said airline crews have wide latitude to decide if passengers pose a safety threat to a flight.
A 9th Circuit panel voted 2-1 to reverse that decision, saying a flight crew cannot arbitrarily kick people off a plane and have them arrested if no crime has been committed. The majority said passengers have a right to be treated fairly and with respect.
Court Filing:
http://www.supremecourt.gov/orders/courtorders/050211zor.pdf
Link: http://www.courthousenews.com/2011/05/02/36266.htm