Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Child abuse on planes an issue

How flight crews respond less clear than in other cases

- By Regina Garcia Cano

Although flight attendants can restrain unruly passengers, rules are less clear regarding adults disciplini­ng children.

LAS VEGAS — Flight crews can restrain passengers or even divert flights when violent behavior erupts midair, but when the situation involves a parent potentiall­y abusing a child, the decisions are not so clear cut.

A 5 1⁄2 -hour JetBlue flight earlier this month continued to its final destinatio­n after three passengers reported a mother mistreatin­g her 8-year-old son, including grabbing him by the neck and shoving him against a window as he cried.

The same day, the airline diverted a flight to Las Vegas after a man reportedly hit and bit other passengers.

The airline did not respond to requests for comment on the incident involving the child, and a federal complaint against the mother does not say whether the flight attendant who received the passenger complaints intervened.

While it may vary by airline, flight attendants are trained in how to de-escalate violent situations under widely accepted procedures, and it is likely that JetBlue concluded it was safest to leave the mother and son together and not disrupt the flight, aviation experts say.

“This is certainly a very unpleasant situation, but it is one that is full of, if you will, gray areas, as opposed to a black-and-white type of situation,” said Henry Harteveldt, a travel industry analyst.

“The challenge is that if you separate the parent from the child, it could elevate the anxiety between the two,” he said. “If the flight attendants were to physically restrain the mother, that too could exacerbate the anxiety in the child by seeing his parent restrained and possibly in harm.”

A misdemeano­r complaint filed in U.S. District Court accuses Cherice Dawn Klipfel of assaulting her son during the flight from Boston to Salt Lake City on Dec. 10. Her attorney did not return a call seeking comment.

A woman sitting next to Klipfel told an FBI agent that she saw the mother strike, slap, kick and shove her son, who had a window seat.

“Each violent episode would be followed by a loving period where [Klipfel] would calm down and they would sit without a problem,” according to the complaint. “[Passenger] was adamant that the violence [Klipfel] was committing against [son] was absolutely not parenting but abuse and assault. [Passenger] described [Klipfel] striking and shoving [boy] while [boy] pleaded for her to stop.”

The complaint says two other passengers saw Klipfel “tightly cover” her son’s face and “shake him aggressive­ly” while the boy cried.

The airline faced another disturbanc­e that day, when a passenger going from Los Angeles to New York had to be restrained after hitting and biting others, according to cellphone video shared with a TV station.

Sara Nelson, internatio­nal president of the Associatio­n of Flight Attendants-CWA union, said many factors play into a decision to divert a flight, including whether the violent behavior has stopped and how quickly the aircraft can secure a landing spot.

She added that flight attendants know to intervene by giving clear verbal commands, restrainin­g a person or separating passengers regardless of relationsh­ip.

“Bottom line, the actions of the mother in assaulting her son would create a very high level of threat,” Nelson said. “This goes beyond the relationsh­ip between the mother and son. This is a passenger that is acting violently against another passenger in a small space where people cannot get away and situations can escalate quickly.”

A grand jury Wednesday returned a misdemeano­r indictment against Klipfel, of Lakewood, Colo. She has been released from custody, and her trial on an assault charge is scheduled for February.

 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES/AP 2007 ?? A Colorado woman on a JetBlue flight was charged after allegedly mistreatin­g her son.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES/AP 2007 A Colorado woman on a JetBlue flight was charged after allegedly mistreatin­g her son.

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