If he did it to them, it would have been terrorism though? I of course agree with not derailing, but I'm genuinely curious. I don't see why the door should only swing one way.That's not what terrorism is though. He was treated like shit and airlines need to fix whatever policy this is, but terrorism is not the discussion to be had here.
A person engages in domestic terrorism if they do an act ""dangerous to human life"" that is a violation of the criminal laws of a state or the United States, if the act appears to be intended to: (i) intimidate or coerce a civilian population;
Why not? To me it looks like an act of terror was conducted against the man.
If he did it to them, it would have been terrorism though? I of course agree with not derailing, but I'm genuinely curious. I don't see why the door should only swing one way.
Ripped from top hit, could be inaccurate
Well then that's retarded and laws are useless. In my opinion it's no morally different, but if unwinnable fine.lol good luck trying to get a court to agree that airport cops committed an act of terrorism. The door only goes one way.
Amazes me how badly their PR is handling this incident.
This is the CEO's email to his employees:
”Certainly you can be involuntarily bumped,” aviation attorney Joseph LoRusso told CBS4's Kelly Werthmann. ”Can you be forcibly removed in a situation like this? That's where we get into a bit of a gray area."
”To the extent this was taken, that creates an entirely different subject of whether it was overly forceful or beyond protocol," he said.
However, LoRusso questions if United Airlines was within its legal right to ask flight 3411 passengers for their seats because standby crew should not have priority over paying customers.
”Were we really dealing with selling more tickets than we had seats? It doesn't seem like that's the case, at which point the overbooking protocol seems to be unwarranted," LoRusso said.
I feel like this his email to reassure his employees that they aren't the baddies here.
You don't even know the answer to your own question FFS
If he did it to them, it would have been terrorism though? I of course agree with not derailing, but I'm genuinely curious. I don't see why the door should only swing one way.
If the "offer" is on the table, then why wasn't the "offer" used on the Employee? They could of waited for another flight instead of this.
I don't understand why you're trying so hard to defend this. This is on the news for being as fucked up as it is and you're defending it? This is the type of stuff that shouldn't be allowed to be forced upon citizens anywhere on any plane or transport system.
This stuff wouldn't be allowed on a public Bus, Train or even Taxi.
If someone has paid for their right to travel, then they shouldn't be physically abused if they're just sitting in the seat they paid for.
If I'm understanding this situation correctly...
1). overbooking is a thing that is imperfect, legal, and might or might not be justified
2). as soon as it became clear that some customers would have to be deplaned, volunteers were sought, and offered a graduated amount of United credit until the amount approached the amount of cash United would have to give to someone in compensation for involuntarily bumping them
3). at this point, apparently (possibly?) by some algorithm, customers were chosen to be involuntarily bumped, and one of those refused to oblige
4). security (supplied by the Chicago Department of Aviation, it seems) was then called in to force the customer to disembark the plane
Right?
So a couple questions to start with: first, in relation to the specific situation being discussed in this thread, during which of those steps (1-4 + whatever I missed) was there a fuck up that moved the situation toward its horrible conclusion? Secondly, talking in a more general sense, which of those steps need to be changed/refined/clarified/whatever else on either a corporate or legal level, for business, social justice/consumer rights, and/or broader economic reasons?
I ask all this because I'm wondering what the takeaway from this situation should be. Obviously United sucks, but a lot of the factors that went into this particular situation are common across all airlines, and also reflect governmental standards across a good chunk of the world. Did this happen because of something specific to United? The corporate culture at United seems conducive to a poor application of common airline practices (e.g., an underemphasis on good customer service makes them a little quick to call in security) , but how much of what happened relates to that, and how much to the practices themselves? Should overbooking not be a thing? Is airline security ill-equipped to handle these kind of situations, or is the type of security we saw in the video a little too accessible for airlines to make use of in these kinds of situations in the first place?
Guess the key thing I'm conflicted on is this: I know this incident should spark change, but I don't know where that change should be concentrated.
Cooper is too chill. Always liked him though.Anderson Cooper: "That statement by the CEO has got to be among one of the worst statements I've heard from a CEO."
Video here:
https://twitter.com/AC360/status/851600794239545345
I accept that is the opinion of the majority of the thread, but I still think it'll be interesting to have it clarified how that holds up legally. A few posters a page or two back claimed boarding meant once the doors close and it is a fact just now involuntary bumping can and has been forced pre getting on the plane. It's rare but it can happen.
The debate is do things change for you legally once you're in a seat, from the point of view of the airline not being able to carry out bumping like they can for what the majority in here class as pre-boarding (gate).
I'm merely suggesting that if the roles were reversed and the passenger was the aggressor, it could have been labelled as an act of terror. Am I way out of normal bounds on this? Absolutely. I just wonder if anyone has ever thought of labelling law enforcement as terrorists, as that's what they appear to be to me these days.I don't understand what you mean. If he was an airline employee who asked them to get off the plane forcefully? This discussion just seems misplaced. It's bad business practices that ended in a terrible situation. I don't see how terrorism fits in unless you have a misunderstanding of the term. I don't think it's relevant to this topic.
I mean, if you want to have the legal conversation, by all means.
I'm not particularly interested in that myself, as there are a whole host of things that are legal that are not good. We've long discussed that the police have a strong legal stronghold in practices that I would consider unethical at best and heinous at worst. The same is true of many corporate practices. This is one of those situations.
As such, the legality is simply a matter of what they can enforce. It does not change the fact that it's not good.
Yep. CEO has to go, talking out of one side of his mouth and then doing the other side to the employees. He fucked up, I really hope this is a lesson for them and he is forced out for this stupidity. Just goes to show he cares more about the bottom line than serving his customers and driving revenue that wayAnderson Cooper: "That statement by the CEO has got to be among one of the worst statements I've heard from a CEO."
Video here:
https://twitter.com/AC360/status/851600794239545345
Anderson Cooper: "That statement by the CEO has got to be among one of the worst statements I've heard from a CEO."
Video here:
https://twitter.com/AC360/status/851600794239545345
I'd be curious to see if enough public pressure and resentment could cause him to resign. If the CEO brings the company profit, and he does in this case, I don't see any board firing him at all otherwise. Unless this causes enough of a financial hit - and to be honest, I doubt many of these people claiming never to fly with United again will remember this in a month's time - I think he'll ride this through.Yep. CEO has to go, talking out of one side of his mouth and then doing the other side to the employees. He fucked up, I really hope this is a lesson for them and he is forced out for this stupidity. Just goes to show he cares more about the bottom line than serving his customers and driving revenue that way
Again, I don't disagree, but until it can be deciphered whether it's legal or not, it can't be challenged correctly. If it is illegal then the way consumers can fight back will be different than if it's legal (for one lawsuits aren't going to be as 'easy' against something that is legal). You need to know what a perceived injustice is, to be able to fight against it.
Plus it's not just snowballing as a case for America but the EU too. Legislation in the EU almost mirrors the US. Just currency differences in compensation.
Yep. CEO has to go, talking out of one side of his mouth and then doing the other side to the employees. He fucked up, I really hope this is a lesson for them and he is forced out for this stupidity. Just goes to show he cares more about the bottom line than serving his customers and driving revenue that way
Munoz was actually honored last month as PRWeeks Communicator of the Year.
Munoz won the award for his efforts over the past year to better engage with employees and customers as he led a dramatic transformation at the airline."
Amazes me how badly their PR is handling this incident.
This is the CEO's email to his employees:
So that witness demolishes official line from United and police how doctor was loud, behaving badly etc. and was driving reason for why he was removed.
Amazes me how badly their PR is handling this incident.
This is the CEO's email to his employees:
And to his last part, 14 CFR 250.2a states "In the event of an oversold flight, every carrier shall ensure that the smallest practicable number of persons holding confirmed reserved space on that flight are denied boarding involuntarily."
United isn't denying that the seats sought were for a different United crew, as has been reported by other passengers on that flight. So this was not an "oversold flight" as required by the federal regulation. And in fact, the title of 14 CFR 250 is "Oversales". As a result, these regulations do not seem to apply to the situation at hand, where United was attempting to bump passengers not due to oversold tickets, but rather to get their crew on the flight.
They didn't bump people off because of flight being overbooked, but for employees who had to be in Louisville to work on a different flight.
This is an interesting wrinkle in the conversation, and now we're getting into legal issues that I doubt most of us in this thread know especially well.
But I'd hesitate to conclude that what happened doesn't register as "overbooking" because employees had to be accounted for. If it's standard procedure to have a standby crew (this is how the article TangoAlphaLima linked to characterized the employees in question), or to ensure seats are available to employees for whatever logistical reasons, does the law on overbooking keep that in mind when considering available seats, or does it refer to literally every potential passenger seat on the plane?
Yeah that's pretty damning all around. I don't buy the random computer lottery thing anymore either. They singled the doctor out because he initially thought he might be able to do it.
Well then that's retarded and laws are useless. In my opinion it's no morally different, but if unwinnable fine.
I did a project for a major airline. This particular airlines system to control flights on the backend was OS3200.
It literally took them 4 weeks to provision a single desktop PC. Someone would have to call the Active Directory team to "Create the AD object" then once that was done, someone else could image the machine with SCCM. Then depending on the type of PC it was, IE was it a gate pc or a check in pc, ticketing machine or a kiosk it needed certain permissions all of which were controlled by back end databases. No problem right? Wrong. One of those systems was a back end SQL database, where they had a guy, literally a single guy who all he did was manually receive the request and put it into the database. For other types of PCs there were two people, and they would receive the request assign it a number, then wait a week to two weeks for the OS3200 mainframe to do a full dump of its data and re import it all back into the system. Their tracking method to keep track of these assignments? Literally printed out pieces of paper kept in a drawer at their desks.
The craziest part for me was the OS3200 mainframe that controlled everything was managed by one guy, who started at the company in like 1968, and had been managing the mainframe since the 70s and he was still there. I'm like this dude has been jacking with this manframe longer than i've been alive.
Part of my task was to automate all this, and to document/discover it all. It never got done because of dysfunction at the airline and my own company. No one would make a damn decision. The back end SQL automation was super easy, but no one cared. Very annoying, was so happy to get the hell off that project.
It's also repeatedly described as "denied boarding compensation" in the "Involuntary Bumping" section; both sections are clearly talking about passengers who have not boarded the plane.
Oh cool, so if I turn up after boarding closes they'll just put me on the next flight because I only really bought carriage from A to B?
- air travel is essential infrastructure
- businesses may be more efficient at delivering essential infrastructure, but if they are not, then the government should nationalize them in the public interest
- satisfaction with airlines is low and not rising
- all airlines provide essentially an identical service except for the routes they serve and their tolerance for passing on misery to passengers under the guise of cost savings
not saying
just saying
I thought I read that their flight they needed to make was tomorrow, so I don't understand why they didn't just wait till the next flight to Louisville today (United has several), and do it properly.
Yeah but this is just the federally mandated amount ? I don't think there's anything stopping airlines for going up more? I wouldn't be surprised if their management wants them to just do the legally mandated minimum and not any more before calling security.
Holy batman, big post! Can you link to anything that says that? I've been pulling my hair out all night trying to solve this goose chase I started myself. Other points you made to me I've either been schooled on by others, or found myself. I now know being picked means "not having a choice", as in it can be forced legally, but I will still stand-by for the airline's sake during this mess on the plane they should just have gone to another passenger when this passenger did not want to comply.
I guess if that is true they can state "denied boarding" is any time up until the doors close? Not just boarding ends after the gates.
In this chapter--  
”aircraft in flight" means an aircraft from the moment all external doors are closed following boarding--  
through the moment when one external door is opened to allow passengers to leave the aircraft;  or  
until, if a forced landing, competent authorities take over responsibility for the aircraft and individuals and property on the aircraft.
Since the US Transportation code was raised earlier, which I take to mean the U.S. Code section on Transportation, 49 USC Section 42301(i)(3)(A) would seem to contradict the earlier statement that passengers are considered "boarded" only when the aircraft doors have been closed.
The section states in part:
"awaiting takeoff after the aircraft doors have been closed or after passengers have been boarded if the passengers have not been advised they are free to deplane"
If aircraft doors closing and passengers boarded were one and the same, the code would not have treated the two as two separate events. The language of "or after passengers have been boarded..." would imply that a passenger can be considered "boarded" prior to the closing of the aircraft doors.
They don't offer cash. It's always travel vouchers.
I've travelled with them for years.
In United vouchers also, which isn't mentioned in the report either.
Not sure if this has already been answered, but
-Was the guy they dragged off previously offered the $1000? (Ed: in vouchers? lol useless)
-How much did he pay for his flight?
-How did they pick people to bump?
Yeah, had they offered cash or gift cards instead of the shitty travel vouchers with expiration dates, someone would have gone for it.
In all honesty I wouldn't be surprised if other American Airlinelines try to avoid talking about this that much, more rules to help the passengers instead of the airlines would be bad for them.
There is worth in discussing the realities of the tickets we buy, otherwise what, just never fly again? As much as all the other airlines are getting free PR out of this, it remains to be a valid question if all of them can too both voluntarily and involuntarily bump in the cabin.
I'm pretty certain no airline is ever going to use force like this again, because there probably is a lawsuit in wait here for excessive force. However, that doesn't answer if an airline can cock up like this again with staff boarding and then legally be able to ask for volunteers, and then move onto mandatory random selection.
Right, the email isn't talking about offering anyone cash at all. It's trying to make it sound like something happened that never did. He was never offered any money at any point. The email references something else completely
Interesting. If the passenger is delayed more than 3 or 4 hours they can be compensated up to 400% or max $1300. I still don't know the specifics of the flight. Were they offering him a flight home the next day? If so, they should have offered 400% the cost of the one way fare.
If the law is supposedly on their side (which fucking sucks), that just makes it crucial that this shitstorm spiral ever more out of control so that they're forced to amend their ways through the court of public opinion, if not a court of law.
All the armchair lawyers in here should probably read a real aviation lawyer's take on this:
http://denver.cbslocal.com/2017/04/10/united-airlines-removed-flight/
And to his last part, 14 CFR 250.2a states "In the event of an oversold flight, every carrier shall ensure that the smallest practicable number of persons holding confirmed reserved space on that flight are denied boarding involuntarily."
Now, look at the summary of events posted earlier in this thread, which appears to be from the CEO:
United isn't denying that the seats sought were for a different United crew, as has been reported by other passengers on that flight. So this was not an "oversold flight" as required by the federal regulation. And in fact, the title of 14 CFR 250 is "Oversales". As a result, these regulations do not seem to apply to the situation at hand, where United was attempting to bump passengers not due to oversold tickets, but rather to get their crew on the flight.
So yeah, please continue telling everyone that this passenger doesn't have a cause of action to file suit against United. There will be a settlement on this, and it will be deserved.
Alexander Bachuwa said:The bottom line is that airlines hold the power to deny someone boarding and to remove someone from the flight. The legal issue may be whether the police used unnecessary force in dealing with the situation. I highly doubt they will be held liable. The passenger was asked to leave and did not, as bad as that sounds.
They didn't bump people off because of flight being overbooked, but for employees who had to be in Louisville to work on a different flight.
The lawyer from the article I posted seems to think overbooking protocol doesn't apply when the seats being sought are for United employees, so I'm going to defer to him on this one.
All the armchair lawyers in here should probably read a real aviation lawyer's take on this:
http://denver.cbslocal.com/2017/04/10/united-airlines-removed-flight/
And to his last part, 14 CFR 250.2a states "In the event of an oversold flight, every carrier shall ensure that the smallest practicable number of persons holding confirmed reserved space on that flight are denied boarding involuntarily."
Now, look at the summary of events posted earlier in this thread, which appears to be from the CEO:
United isn't denying that the seats sought were for a different United crew, as has been reported by other passengers on that flight. So this was not an "oversold flight" as required by the federal regulation. And in fact, the title of 14 CFR 250 is "Oversales". As a result, these regulations do not seem to apply to the situation at hand, where United was attempting to bump passengers not due to oversold tickets, but rather to get their crew on the flight.
So yeah, please continue telling everyone that this passenger doesn't have a cause of action to file suit against United. There will be a settlement on this, and it will be deserved.
And here is another aviation lawyer:
https://thepointsguy.com/2017/04/your-rights-on-involuntary-bumps/
He does. However, there's a practical issue to be considered here that makes me wonder how the law has been applied. Because we know it's incredibly common to oversell tickets, right? If it's also common to account for employees when considering seat availability for costumers, how often has overbooking law actually been applicable to the situations its been invoked in? Do airlines typically make a different choice from United, and simply don't seat their employees when a flight has reached capacity? And if there's some meaningful reason that employees need to be prioritized sometimes (or regularly), well, doesn't there seem to be a bit of tension there, depending on how you interpret overbooking law?
I want to see this guy destroyed. Fuck him, hope he rots in prison and has to sell his cars and properties to pay the victim. He deserves no less than that. Damn, absolutely zero remorse or regret, he's a piece of shit.Amazes me how badly their PR is handling this incident.
This is the CEO's email to his employees:
Ah yes, the aviation lawyer that gives no actual analysis of the situation, yet comes to the conclusion that the airline was in the right. And from the blogger who blames the victim. Great source you have there.
My source pointed out how the facts of this case differ from a standard overbooking, and noted that it was a potential gray area at best, and at worst was simply not authorized under federal law. I think my source is just a bit more credible than yours.