Get Started

Learn more about Credit Cards, Travel Programs, Deals, and more.

FAA Levies $119K in Fines for Fake Plane Hijacking Threats, Fighting with Flight Attendants and More

This post may contain affiliate links - Advertiser Disclosure. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.

FAA Levies $119K in Fines for Unruly Passengers

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) continues to crack down on unruly passengers, announcing a new round of proposed fines earlier this week. The FAA levied $119,000 in civil penalties against passengers for alleged violations of federal regulations as part of its Zero Tolerance efforts.

These latest cases propose civil penalties against nine passengers ranging from $7,500 to $21,500 for allegedly interfering with flight attendants who instructed passengers to obey cabin crew instructions and various federal regulations. The cases involve assaulting the flight crew and other passengers, a fake 911 call for a hijacking and bomb threats, drinking alcohol brought aboard the plane and refusing to wear facemasks.

This year the FAA has received a total of 3,271 reports of unruly behavior by passengers, including about 2,475 reports of passengers refusing to comply with the federal transportation mask mandate.

  • $21,500 proposed fine: On a Dec. 27, 2020, Frontier Airlines flight from Nashville, Tennessee, to Orlando, Florida, a passenger allegedly drank his own alcohol and refused to wear a face mask. The passenger got into a fight with the flight attendant and passengers about the mask policy and struck the passenger next to him on the head, the FAA says.
  • $18,500 and $10,000 proposed fines: On a Feb. 19 Republic Airlines flight from Indianapolis to Philadelphia, flight attendants repeatedly told two women to wear their face masks properly, the FAA says. During taxi from the gate, the woman who faces an $18,500 fine threatened the passenger in front of her when they closed the window shade. The crew notified the captain, and the plane returned to the gate for law enforcement to meet them. As she stood up to leave the plane, she allegedly punched the woman in front of her, who was holding a baby, in the back of the head. Another woman in the group, who faces a $10,000 fine, reportedly refused to buckle her seat belt and wear her mask.
  • $17,000 proposed fine: On a Jan. 25 Frontier Airlines flight from St. Louis to Las Vegas, a man refused to wear his mask after repeated instructions to do so, the FAA says, noting that he also stood up and moved to a different seat during the descent despite flight crew instructions.
  • $13,000 proposed fine: On a Jan. 29 Frontier Airlines flight from San Diego to Las Vegas, a woman repeatedly removed her mask and drank her own alcohol, the FAA says.
  • $10,500 proposed fine: On a Feb. 27 Allegiant Air flight from Provo, Utah, to Mesa, Arizona, a man refused to wear his mask over his mouth and nose throughout the flight despite seven separate times flight attendants asked him to wear it properly, the FAA says. After the plane landed, he allegedly approached a flight attendant from behind as she prepared to open the cabin door and touched her, though he said she was being aggressive about the mask policy and he just got very close to her while complaining about it.
  • $10,500 proposed fine: On a Jan. 23 Alaska Airlines flight from Seattle to Ketchikan, Alaska, as the flight was about to leave the gate, a passenger made a 911 call reporting that the plane was being hijacked by a man with a knife, the FAA says. Due to the 911 calls, the pilots taxied to a cargo ramp for law enforcement to meet the flight and evacuate passengers and crew. While at the cargo ramp, the passenger reportedly called the FBI and made mention of a bomb. The plane was temporarily taken out of service for bomb screening, and law enforcement also screened all passengers and crew and found the passenger’s claims to be fake.
  • $10,500 proposed fine: On a Dec. 19, 2020, Allegiant Air flight from Syracuse, New York, to Punta Gorda, Florida, a man reportedly got out of his seat to use the lavatory during turbulence when the fasten-seat belt sign was on and argued with flight attendants. He was reminded to wear a mask several times, the FAA says, and began vaping despite flight attendants telling him to stop. The captain called for law enforcement to meet the passenger at the gate.
  • $7,500 proposed fine: On a Feb. 25 Southwest Airlines flight from Denver to Los Angeles, flight attendants instructed a passenger twice to wear his mask properly, and he moved it below his nose and mouth both times, the FAA says. A Southwest Airlines customer service supervisor boarded the plane to speak with him, but he still wouldn’t wear his mask properly. The airline deplaned the flight, and the man was not allowed to reboard.

You can read the full FAA press release here.

Disclosure: Miles to Memories has partnered with CardRatings for our coverage of credit card products. Miles to Memories and CardRatings may receive a commission from card issuers.

Lower Spend - Chase Ink Business Preferred® 100K!

Chase Ink Business Preferred® is a powerful card that earns 3X Ultimate Rewards points in a broad range of business categories on the first $150K in spend per year. Right now earn 100K Chase Ultimate Rewards points after $15K $8K spend in the first 3 months with a $95 annual fee.

Learn more about this card and its features!


Opinions, reviews, analyses & recommendations are the author’s alone, and have not been reviewed, endorsed or approved by any of these entities.
DDG
DDGhttp://dannydealguru.com
Based in NYC. Points/miles enthusiast for years and actively writing about it for the last 6+ years at Danny the Deal Guru. I'm always looking out for deals. Making a few bucks is always nice, but the traveling is by far the best part of this business.

Responses are not provided or commissioned by the bank advertiser. Responses have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by the bank advertiser. It is not the bank advertiser's responsibility to ensure all posts and/or questions are answered.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Related

7,703FansLike
9,903FollowersFollow
16,444FollowersFollow