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"The official was questioned and released, and NO CHARGES WERE FILED IN THE
INCIDENT." While the PIC has full control over the flight, in this instance, we have seen no evidence that the PIC was involved in the action. And absent specific instructions from the PIC, I think it is quite possible that a flight standards manager could very well trump a flight attendant. Just a guess, but I imagine that the situation escalated because of some sort of interpersonal issues between the FAA official and the FA. As an analogy, scale the incident down to where it involves an off-duty policeman in plain clothes riding on a city bus when an altercation broke out. If you were on the bus, wouldn't you want the cop to trump the bus driver in handling the situation? Frankly, none of us can make any sort of judgment regarding the situation based on the information we have seen here; we simply aren't given all of the facts. And I think that the whole purpose of the original post was to feed those who hate the FAA. "Matt Barrow" wrote in message ... "Denny" wrote in message oups.com... FAA OFFICIAL, FLIGHT ATTENDANT IN ALTERCATION ALOFT An FAA official was handcuffed and detained when she disembarked in Kansas City after an altercation during a Southwest Airlines flight on March 26, The Kansas City Star reported on Saturday. A flight standards manager for the Central Region, she had argued with a flight attendant, according to the Star. The flight attendant told police that the official had confronted him about how he was handling a disturbance in the back of the airplane. He told the official to sit down and let him handle it, and the official allegedly became verbally combative and shoved him. Police and investigators from the Transportation Security Administration met the airplane when it landed, and the official was handcuffed after she objected to being detained. http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#189501 If that was a civilian, rather than a privileged bureaucrat, I wonder how much they would have charged her with. But then, the masters-servants role has reversed these past few generations. |
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