South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Q Stuck after someone stole American Airlines miles

- By Christophe­r Elliott

A: I’m sorry someone stole your American Airlines miles. The airline is under no obligation to return the awards, if I’m reading its terms and conditions correctly. But a representa­tive assured you in writing that you’d get the miles back, so the airline should do what it said.

You kept a terrific paper trail. It shows that the American representa­tive would not accept the police report you filed because it redacted the names of the suspects. What a maddening bureaucrat­ic problem.

I can’t pass up the opportunit­y to say something about the value of participat­ing in a loyalty program. According to American’s terms, your miles have “no cash value.” Howrefresh­ingly honest! Many travelers are better off booking the best airline ticket for their money instead of

Someone stole 50,000 miles frommy American Airlines AAdvantage account. The pointswere redeemed for a flight.

I reported the theft to the Internet Crime Complaint Center and filed a police report, as requested by American Airlines. The airline provided the names of the two passengers who flew usingmymil­es. I gave these names inmy police report. But now, American says the suspects’ names must showon the police report before it reinstates­my miles.

The sheriff’s department says the suspects’ names must be redacted because therewere no arrests. So I findmyself caught in the middle with nowhere to go. Could you help me getmy 50,000 miles back?

— Gail Louis, Placervill­e, California playing the miles game. Youmay be among them.

When you’re caught in a bureaucrat­ic Catch-22, you can sometimes request additional documentat­ion from one of the parties. Maybe Americanwo­uld have accepted something in writing fromthe sheriff’s department, verifying that it had recorded the names of the suspects but explaining why it couldn’t list the names on its crime report. Bottom line: There might have been away to negotiate a solution.

Finally, I think you could have appealed this to an American Airlines executive. I list the names, numbers and email addresses of the key managers onmy consumer advocacy site www.elliott.org/company -contacts/american -airlines/.

Your case is a cautionary tale about computer security. Remember to change your passwords often and never share a password between accounts. Security breaches happen all the time. Passwords are compromise­d. And then you end up paying for a thief’s vacation trip.

I contacted American on your behalf. It says it never received a separate form filed with the Internet Crime Complaint Center. Once you supplied American with that form, the airline returned your 50,000 miles.

If you need help with a coronaviru­s-related refund, please contact me. You can send details throughmy consumer advocacy site or email me at chris@elliott.org.

Christophe­r Elliott is the chief advocacy officer of ElliottAdv­ocacy, a nonprofit organizati­on that helps consumers resolve their problems. Contact him at elliott.org/ help or chris@ elliott.org.

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