Turns out the UA wasn't overbooked on the flight. They decided to transport 4 crew to another location and booted 4 paying passengers to do so. Anyone that flies UA now knows where their priorities are.One of the most ridiculous things I read was that this passenger has "past history".
I do not care if he has been convicted of murder. He paid for the ticket, he is in his seat and he has the right to be there. If UA overbooks intentionally, then they better have a solution as well. Dragging a citizen off the flight is certainly not one of them. I heard that now they are offering extra compensation to EVERY person on that flight. Talk about trying to cover your butt.
My parents were once in this situation at YVR (with Air Canada on an across the globe flight) and they were offered free transportation to home and back OR accommodations at a hotel. If they accepted either one of those, they were also going to be travelling in business class on the next day. They refused it, and guess what, they were NOT dragged off the plane.
Shame on UA.
Considering these were gun-tottin' police officers doing the violence on Doc. Dao trying to interfere might not have been the best course of action. Had it been strictly airline staff, I could see myself really needing to get something out of the overhead....but.......One of the most appalling thing I thought of and surprisingly, nobody has said anything is the fact that even though there were plenty of outrage among passengers on the plane, nobody stepped in to try to stop or interfere with the act of violence. Passengers can easily just stand and block the aisle, voice their did-satisfaction and create a mutiny on the plane. But nobody did that. It's like witnessing a rape but never stepped in to help. I think it's wrong.
Never interfere with cops in US. Federal Offence and very big trouble. To even suggest it is idiotic.Considering these were gun-tottin' police officers doing the violence on Doc. Dao trying to interfere might not have been the best course of action
Apparently all three police are suspended.How the cop handled it definitely exacerbated the situation. Does anyone know if he over-acted on his own or..? (I heard he was suspended.).
Considering the abrupt change of tone form the CEO, my guess is that these 4 UA employees did not really have to make the destination to be ready for the next day's flights as UA initially claimed. They were probably flying on standby and realized that was the last flight out for the night. So they just showed up at the gate and got the ground staff to boot 4 people off the plane so that they would not have to wait till the next day. So, completely cowboy style not following policy and abusing the power that the ground crew manager has.If I heard correctly, it was an airport police that dragged Dao. There might be different pieces to this in that what did the or an UA crew ask the cop to do? To remove Dao? Or to remove him no matter what you have to do? etc.
One piece is UA's policy itself. Another is how the whole thing was carried out.
How the cop handled it definitely exacerbated the situation. Does anyone know if he over-acted on his own or..? (I heard he was suspended.)
It also seems that he's put in a tough (moral?) situation. If we had his job, I guess that some of us will try to remove Dao as diplomatically as possible (myself included). But when the passenger refuses, then what do you do?
I don't like what happened neither. Just bringing other pieces/aspects to light.
How you guys think the doctor interfered I will not understand.Never interfere with cops in US. Federal Offence and very big trouble. To even suggest it is idiotic.
Westwoodrow nor anyone else suggested the doctor interfered. Someone made a comment as to why other passengers did not interfere with the cops dragging this guy off the plane.How you guys think the doctor interfered I will not understand.






