American flight
diverted after passenger assaults attendant, airline says
American Airlines
said a flight attendant was physically assaulted Wednesday by a passenger
during a flight from New York to California.
An American
Airlines flight was diverted Wednesday evening after a passenger reportedly
assaulted a flight attendant.
Flight 976 had
departed New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport and was headed to
John Wayne Airport in Orange County, California, but was diverted to Denver
because of the incident, the airline said.
Law enforcement
apprehended the passenger at the gate, according to American Airlines.
The airline did
not provide additional details or the flight attendant's condition.
“Acts of violence
against our team members will not be tolerated by American Airlines,"
it said in a written statement. "The individual involved in this
incident will never be allowed to travel with American Airlines in the
future, but we will not be satisfied until he has been prosecuted to the
full extent of the law. This behavior must stop, and aggressive enforcement
and prosecution of the law is the best deterrent."
The passenger's
identity has not been released, and no details were immediately available
about charges.
Denver Airport
Police confirmed the flight was diverted into Denver around 6 p.m. and said
the FBI is investigating.
The flight left
Denver for Orange County about 9:30 p.m., according to American Airlines.
Reports of unruly
behavior on planes, including violence against crew members, have increased
since the start of the pandemic.
Data provided by
the Federal Aviation Administration show 923 investigations have been
initiated this year into violations of specific regulations or federal
laws.
The number is up
from 183 last year and 146 in 2019. Prior to 2021, the most investigations
initiated in the 26-year period dating back to 1995 was 310 in 2004.
In May, a
Southwest Airlines flight attendant lost two teeth after a passenger
punched her in the face and pulled her hair, according to court documents.
The attendant had asked the passenger to fasten her seatbelt, stow her tray
table and properly wear her mask during the final descent.
The passenger told
law enforcement that she was acting in self-defense, according to court
documents.
She was charged in
federal court with assault and interference with flight crew members and
attendants and has pleaded not guilty, according to court records.
As of Tuesday, the
Federal Aviation Administration has received 4,941 reports of unruly
behavior by passengers this year, including 3,580 reports of mask-related
incidents.
The rate of these
incidents has dropped about 50 percent since record highs earlier this
year, but FAA Administrator Steve Dickson said in September that progress
needs to continue.
“This remains a
serious safety threat, and one incident is one too many,” Dickson said in a
written statement.
The FAA has no
authority to prosecute criminal cases but can levy fines and implemented a
zero-tolerance campaign in January that permitted it to issue fines without
warning letters.
This year, the
agency has brought more than $1 million in fines against passengers for the
allegations of unruly behavior.
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