Reality is above the law unless you have a very good lawyer.Strontium Dog wrote:Technically the passenger who refused a request from the pilot to leave the plane is the one who broke the law.
Realistically, that's not going to matter a jot.

Reality is above the law unless you have a very good lawyer.Strontium Dog wrote:Technically the passenger who refused a request from the pilot to leave the plane is the one who broke the law.
Realistically, that's not going to matter a jot.
Which law?Strontium Dog wrote:Technically the passenger who refused a request from the pilot to leave the plane is the one who broke the law.
Realistically, that's not going to matter a jot.
It's aviation law pretty much everywhere. The pilot is in charge of his aircraft. As the Independent's excellent travel expert Simon Calder points out.Forty Two wrote:Which law?Strontium Dog wrote:Technically the passenger who refused a request from the pilot to leave the plane is the one who broke the law.
Realistically, that's not going to matter a jot.
And here's another expert opinion.Is it legal for the airline to treat a fare-paying passenger like this?
Yes. The captain is in charge of the aircraft. And if he or she decides that someone needs to be offloaded, that command has to be obeyed. From the moment that the unfortunate individual in this case said, “I’m staying put”, he became a disruptive passenger. He was disobeying the captain’s command. Officials were legally entitled to remove him, and they did so using plenty of physical force.
It appears from the evidence that the law was broken – by him, not by the airline. But I would be surprised if United pressed charges.
Andrew Harakas, partner and aviation expert at Clyde & Co law firm, told The Independent that Mr Dao was effectively obliged to disembark under federal law if asked to do so by staff.
“Once you’re a passenger on board an aircraft you can’t interfere with the crew performing their duties or the aircraft being operated, that’s the basic rule,” he said.
“He was denied boarding, he should have got off the plane but he didn’t and the authorities were called. From a legal perspective, he was violating the law if he interfered with the crew members’ duties or the ability for the plane to be operated."
DaveDodo007 wrote:Lol, what a timeline to live in. The sad, pathetic lefty/liberals are supporting the globalist corporations when they act like fascists. I thank you with all my heart, you can continue to suck the globalist, corporate, open border federalist cock for all it is worth. Be sure to look down on the 'racist', 'sexist' scumbag working class from your ivory tower as we recruit them for the day of the rope and your free 'one way' helicopter rides.
You were saying?JimC wrote:I hope he hires a firm of lawyers with reputations like rabid sharks. I'll be interested in the size of his settlement - he should be able to buy his own private hospital...
You are just one of those ebil centralist who we have to tolerate unfortunately.JimC wrote:DaveDodo007 wrote:Lol, what a timeline to live in. The sad, pathetic lefty/liberals are supporting the globalist corporations when they act like fascists. I thank you with all my heart, you can continue to suck the globalist, corporate, open border federalist cock for all it is worth. Be sure to look down on the 'racist', 'sexist' scumbag working class from your ivory tower as we recruit them for the day of the rope and your free 'one way' helicopter rides.You were saying?JimC wrote:I hope he hires a firm of lawyers with reputations like rabid sharks. I'll be interested in the size of his settlement - he should be able to buy his own private hospital...
Can you quote that law?Strontium Dog wrote:Technically the passenger who refused a request from the pilot to leave the plane is the one who broke the law.
Really? You act live you've read it. If you have, then post the law that applies.Strontium Dog wrote:It's aviation law pretty much everywhere.Forty Two wrote:Which law?Strontium Dog wrote:Technically the passenger who refused a request from the pilot to leave the plane is the one who broke the law.
Realistically, that's not going to matter a jot.
LOL, that's a circular argument if ever I've heard one. He could only be a disruptive passenger if he was disobeying a legal command. He wasn't being disruptive when the command was issued.The pilot is in charge of his aircraft. As the Independent's excellent travel expert Simon Calder points out.
http://www.independent.co.uk/travel/new ... 77601.html
Is it legal for the airline to treat a fare-paying passenger like this?
Yes. The captain is in charge of the aircraft. And if he or she decides that someone needs to be offloaded, that command has to be obeyed. From the moment that the unfortunate individual in this case said, “I’m staying put”, he became a disruptive passenger. He was disobeying the captain’s command.
That's another circular argument. Their duties don't involve arbitrarily removing people from the plane, unless that person is a disruption.And here's another expert opinion.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world ... 78716.html
Andrew Harakas, partner and aviation expert at Clyde & Co law firm, told The Independent that Mr Dao was effectively obliged to disembark under federal law if asked to do so by staff.
“Once you’re a passenger on board an aircraft you can’t interfere with the crew performing their duties or the aircraft being operated, that’s the basic rule,” he said.
No he wasn't. This guy can be dismissed from this alone. In that last sentence he argued from the perspective of the guy being boarded already, and then he claims he wasn't boarded. He appears to be simply engaged in apologetics.“He was denied boarding,
Incorrect, based on what 42 said earlier. He was allowed to board...Andrew Harakas, partner and aviation expert at Clyde & Co law firm, told The Independent that Mr Dao was effectively obliged to disembark under federal law if asked to do so by staff.
“Once you’re a passenger on board an aircraft you can’t interfere with the crew performing their duties or the aircraft being operated, that’s the basic rule,” he said.
“He was denied boarding, he should have got off the plane but he didn’t and the authorities were called. From a legal perspective, he was violating the law if he interfered with the crew members’ duties or the ability for the plane to be operated."
pErvin wrote:
...I'm with 42 on this...
You were asked to cite the law. What you cited is "expert opinion". Furthermore, there is a difference between airline rules and law. Those rules can be anything the airlines decide on, but unless they are backed by actual law they are not enforceable in court.Strontium Dog wrote:It's aviation law pretty much everywhere. The pilot is in charge of his aircraft. As the Independent's excellent travel expert Simon Calder points out.Forty Two wrote:Which law?Strontium Dog wrote:Technically the passenger who refused a request from the pilot to leave the plane is the one who broke the law.
Realistically, that's not going to matter a jot.
http://www.independent.co.uk/travel/new ... 77601.html
And here's another expert opinion.Is it legal for the airline to treat a fare-paying passenger like this?
Yes. The captain is in charge of the aircraft. And if he or she decides that someone needs to be offloaded, that command has to be obeyed. From the moment that the unfortunate individual in this case said, “I’m staying put”, he became a disruptive passenger. He was disobeying the captain’s command. Officials were legally entitled to remove him, and they did so using plenty of physical force.
It appears from the evidence that the law was broken – by him, not by the airline. But I would be surprised if United pressed charges.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world ... 78716.html
Andrew Harakas, partner and aviation expert at Clyde & Co law firm, told The Independent that Mr Dao was effectively obliged to disembark under federal law if asked to do so by staff.
“Once you’re a passenger on board an aircraft you can’t interfere with the crew performing their duties or the aircraft being operated, that’s the basic rule,” he said.
“He was denied boarding, he should have got off the plane but he didn’t and the authorities were called. From a legal perspective, he was violating the law if he interfered with the crew members’ duties or the ability for the plane to be operated."
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