Good point. The law only states payment on involuntary. Maybe United might have a "policy" (unspoken or otherwise) saying try $400, then $800, then go nuclear.4x is just the rule for involuntary bumping. I haven't seen anything that says they are limited to four times ticket cost for voluntary bumping.
If you (or anyone else) cant see LE is not in the "pretty please (with sugar on top)" business, its you that's living under the rock. Cops tell you to move, you move. Refuse to move and they will move you. The more you fight, the harder they go. Its pretty simple.He may have been at fault to some degree, but that doesn't warrant the treatment he got. If you can't see that, the rock you have been living under, has impaired your vision.
So what's the answer when you lawfully ask someone to leave and they refuse?I would be able to understand the use of force if this guy was an unruly passenger who was becoming a threat to other passengers and/or flight crew, but this was not this type of situation at all.
So how do you get him off?I would be able to understand the use of force if this guy was an unruly passenger who was becoming a threat to other passengers and/or flight crew, but this was not this type of situation at all.
Well that so-called "cop" was placed on leave, if that tells you anything about how the situation should have been handled, guy.If you (or anyone else) cant see LE is not in the "pretty please (with sugar on top)" business, its you that's living under the rock. Cops tell you to move, you move. Refuse to move and they will move you. The more you fight, the harder they go. Its pretty simple.
Whatever Donald.Well that so-called "cop" was placed on leave, if that tells you anything about how the situation should have been handled, guy.
Was it legal? Didn't someone post the policy earlier that in order to make him leave they had to give him written notification/reasoning and offer him $1350?So what's the answer when you lawfully ask someone to leave and they refuse?
I'm still waiting on Zow's insight, but I'm pretty sure the response escalation protocol is:So what's the answer when you lawfully ask someone to leave and they refuse?
Keep fighting the good fight, buddy. Hopefully some day you will know how it feels to have your rights violated, you entitled #####.Whatever Donald.
it escalates pretty quickly between steps 2 and 3 and then just gets cruel and unusual at step numero 4 take that to the made the old swcer laugh bank brohanI'm still waiting on Zow's insight, but I'm pretty sure the response escalation protocol is:
1) Verbal taunting, but no insulting of family members
2) Noogies
3) Electric Chair
4) Subjecting the perpetrator to the entire Hank Williams Jr. catalog indefinitely.
Yes, from several sources it was legal.Was it legal? Didn't someone post the policy earlier that in order to make him leave they had to give him written notification/reasoning and offer him $1350?
Given that another passenger said they offered to give up their seat for $1500 and were laughed at, do we really believe United gave this guy a written notice and offered him $1350 before dragging him off the plane by force?
Keep fighting the good fight, buddy. Hopefully some day you will know how it feels to have your rights violated, you entitled #####.
Watch the videos again. When they begin, the "Police" (calling them that as that is what was printed on their jackets) are standing by the guy's row. We don't see what lead up to that point nor what was said. They didn't run onto the plane and storm this guy immediately with nothing said, though. That we can see. I could be wrong, but I suspect they approached his row and told him to get up because he needs to get off the plane. He may not have ever even looked up from his phone which he's clinging to throughout the process. When they told him to get up and he ignored them, the easy way was no longer an option and it was time for the hard way. It takes the officer a few tries to pull the guy out of his seat and it would seem the last one jerked him hard enough that he hit his face on the armrest across the aisle.O.k., bear with me as I'm trying to understand this. Is the idea that (for instance), as long as the security guy (policeman, air marshall, whatever) only intended to put handcuffs on or otherwise restrain the passenger in the standard non-injurious manner (whatever that is), then it's reasonable/necessary that in the act of doing that he somehow caused the passenger's head to hit the arm rest?
Don't have moronic policies where you have to forcefully remove an already boarded passenger who is minding their own business.So how do you get him off?
This is the crux of the discussion I'm having with Woz. I'm sure the law enforcement person didn't intend to seriously injure the guy, but that's what resulted from the law enforcement person's actions - what's the responsibility/liability for law enforcement there? What's the responsibility on the airline's part to make sure law enforcement has a complete understanding of the reason their presence has been requested? There's no way that what resulted was merited based on the initial circumstances, and that's not all on the passenger.Watch the videos again. When they begin, the "Police" (calling them that as that is what was printed on their jackets) are standing by the guy's row. We don't see what lead up to that point nor what was said. They didn't run onto the plane and storm this guy immediately with nothing said, though. That we can see. I could be wrong, but I suspect they approached his row and told him to get up because he needs to get off the plane. He may not have ever even looked up from his phone which he's clinging to throughout the process. When they told him to get up and he ignored them, the easy way was no longer an option and it was time for the hard way. It takes the officer a few tries to pull the guy out of his seat and it would seem the last one jerked him hard enough that he hit his face on the armrest across the aisle.
Some of you people and the whole "these hired goons just came on to the plane and beat the #### out of a senior citizen for absolutely no reason" need to get a grip.
I've been avoiding United for a long time before this. But it's nice to be reminded of what I've been missing.In a week no one will remember the airline name nor care.
Link?
I don't think that is uncommon when there is a confrontation that gets physical and there are injuries. It doesn't necessarily mean he handled it improperly.Well that so-called "cop" was placed on leave, if that tells you anything about how the situation should have been handled, guy.
Pretty much.In a week no one will remember the airline name nor care.
Again, yes an airline has legal rights to remove a passenger but only if they follow the proper procedure.Can United really do this? Legally, yes. https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2017/04/united-video-scandal-law/522552/
Point 25 describes in detail how much the airline is willing to pay to entice passengers off of an oversold flight, but it also reserves the right to deny boarding to passengers trying to get on to an oversold flight. https://www.complianceweek.com/blogs/coffin-on-compliance/sometimes-the-rules-will-not-save-you#.WOv9y2d0o4t
Fair - but, there needs to be an allegation of misconduct to place someone on administrative leave (video evidence in this case). I only know what I've seen and read online about this situation, but from the reactions of the other passengers on that plane in the videos circulating, it definitely seems like it was handled improperly in this specific situation.I don't think that is uncommon when there is a confrontation that gets physical and there are injuries. It doesn't necessarily mean he handled it improperly.
:Honda:There is a United Over Bookings Twitter account with a few fun photos.![]()
https://twitter.com/UnitedOverBooks
United Over Bookings
@UnitedOverBooks
we over book flights and kick people off for fun
This is untrue. Some people feel a fidelity to an airline they travel often. I'll remember United did this. Sure I will.In a week no one will remember the airline name nor care.
Not true. If you insist on cash they have to pay you in cash/check. The logic being that the law needs to take into account a person who does not travel often for whom a travel voucher would be worthless.You know they don't offer cash, right? It's an air travel voucher. Not quite the same.
They appeared to have followed their procedure as stated in their contract. Nothing in the transportation.gov info says the airline is required to provide any written explanation before choosing and removing a ticketed passenger. They're not "served" and they're not read their rights. You would get a piece of paper explaining your rights and compensation once you're back at the gate.Again, yes an airline has legal rights to remove a passenger but only if they follow the proper procedure.
As far as I'm aware there is not a single source that has stated that United did indeed follow the proper procedure, which includes a written notice of their rights (via transportation.gov).
Did you see the guy holding a piece of paper in any of those videos?
It's possible that they did serve him with one, but no one has said as much yet.
You can only insist on cash in the involuntary context, and which is where the law kicks in. They only offered vouchers when they were seeking volunteers.Not true. If you insist on cash they have to pay you in cash/check. The logic being that the law needs to take into account a person who does not travel often for whom a travel voucher would be worthless.
The minimum compesation, I believe, is the lower of 4x the ticket cost or $1,350.
So hypothetically any offer above 800 (if the ticket is 200) for volunteers would be eating into their bottom line, so they just went involuntary, with the results now occupying the entire world.
The Kardashians seem to think so.Is any publicity good publicity? Just asking for a friend.
They seemed, at one point, to be laughing all the way to the bank that spit out more than eight hundred bucks just for typing in an incorrect pin code.The Kardashians seem to think so.
That means nothing. He had already boarded. Both articles say there is no policy for passengers that are already on the plane.Can United really do this? Legally, yes. https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2017/04/united-video-scandal-law/522552/
Point 25 describes in detail how much the airline is willing to pay to entice passengers off of an oversold flight, but it also reserves the right to deny boarding to passengers trying to get on to an oversold flight. https://www.complianceweek.com/blogs/coffin-on-compliance/sometimes-the-rules-will-not-save-you#.WOv9y2d0o4t
This from "Grace Under Pressure""DON'T YOU UNDERSTAND, IT WAS PERFECTLY LEGAL!!!" WHAT ELSE WERE THEY SUPPOSED TO DO?? THEY WARNED THE GUY, MAYBE HE SHOULD TRY READING THE TERMS OF AGREEMENT NEXT TIME LOSER! IN FACT NEXT TIME THEY SHOULD BEAT HIS ### RIGHT IN FRONT OF KIDS TO TEACH THEM A LESSON!"
I mean, that doctor is going to be lucky if United doesn't freaking sue him, and probably the security guard should sue him too.
zone. Where in either of those articles does it state that?That means nothing. He had already boarded. Both articles say there is no policy for passengers that are already on the plane.
If not he should be.They seemed, at one point, to be laughing all the way to the bank that spit out more than eight hundred bucks just for typing in an incorrect pin code.
Is Kanye still broke?
"Here is the key part of the contract language, under Rule 25 Denied Boarding Compensation (which, notably, says nothing about forcibly removing passengers after they have boarded the plane to make room for United workers):"Where in either of those articles does it state that?
They likely have an out for "boarding" until the cabin door is shut.
Obviously this is a relatively gray area where specific facts of an individual situation really really matter. Also, almost every law enforcement agency has some sort of policy or training guidelines for use of force situations. Here, it did not look, at least to me, that the officer directly caused the injury. The officer looked to be grabbing the guy, the guy still passively resisted (i.e. did not fight the officer but essentially went limp/didn't let himself be carried away) and the combination of the two probably caused the injury.O.k., bear with me as I'm trying to understand this. Is the idea that (for instance), as long as the security guy (policeman, air marshall, whatever) only intended to put handcuffs on or otherwise restrain the passenger in the standard non-injurious manner (whatever that is), then it's reasonable/necessary that in the act of doing that he somehow caused the passenger's head to hit the arm rest?
I honestly can't believe I keep defending the airlines here, but at the point it got to it was probably a trespassing situation. As such, law enforcement was the one who decided to forcibly remove the passenger. Huge distinction here."Here is the key part of the contract language, under Rule 25 Denied Boarding Compensation (which, notably, says nothing about forcibly removing passengers after they have boarded the plane to make room for United workers):"
A) They never offered the full amount from all accountsCan United really do this? Legally, yes. https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2017/04/united-video-scandal-law/522552/
Point 25 describes in detail how much the airline is willing to pay to entice passengers off of an oversold flight, but it also reserves the right to deny boarding to passengers trying to get on to an oversold flight. https://www.complianceweek.com/blogs/coffin-on-compliance/sometimes-the-rules-will-not-save-you#.WOv9y2d0o4t
I take that as the writer's disgust with the situation, not that they (United) had broken a law or internal policy. So going back to your point of " That means nothing.", when both articles say they legally could do what they did it clearly does not mean nothing."Here is the key part of the contract language, under Rule 25 Denied Boarding Compensation (which, notably, says nothing about forcibly removing passengers after they have boarded the plane to make room for United workers):"
No it wasn't. The airline had not offered the full amount they were obligated to offer for someone getting bumped and they had not provided him with a written notice of his rights. As such, they had no right by regulation nor contract to remove him. He was fully in his rights not to move until those requirements were fulfilled.I honestly can't believe I keep defending the airlines here, but at the point it got to it was probably a trespassing situation. As such, law enforcement was the one who decided to forcibly remove the passenger. Huge distinction here.
You just aren't getting it. There IS NO policy dealing with passengers that have already boarded.I take that as the writer's disgust with the situation, not that they (United) had broken a law or internal policy. So going back to your point of " That means nothing.", when both articles say they legally could do what they did it clearly does not mean nothing.