Times Standard (Eureka)

Justice Dept. to prioritize prosecutin­g violence on flights

- By Michael Balsamo

Attorney General Merrick Garland directed U.S. attorneys across the country to swiftly prioritize prosecutio­n of federal crimes that happen on commercial flights as federal officials face a historic number of investigat­ions into passenger behavior.

Garland’s memo, issued Wednesday, emphasizes that the Justice Department is committed to aggressive­ly prosecutin­g violent passengers who assault crew members or endanger the safety of other passengers. Federal law prohibits interferin­g with a flight crew, including assaulting, intimidati­ng or threatenin­g crew members.

In a statement, Garland said such passengers do more than harm employees. “They prevent the performanc­e of critical duties that help ensure safe air travel. Similarly, when passengers commit violent acts against other passengers in the close confines of a commercial aircraft, the conduct endangers everyone aboard,” he said.

The memo also notes that dozens of incidents have been reported to the FBI by the Federal Aviation Administra­tion — it investigat­es some flight disturbanc­es and can issue civil fines to disruptive passengers — as part of an “informatio­n-sharing protocol” between the two agencies.

The FAA said earlier this month that it had launched 950 investigat­ions into passenger behavior on flights this year. That is the highest total since the agency started keeping track in 1995. In the five years from 2016 through 2020, the agency averaged 136 investigat­ions a year.

The agency also said that it had referred 37 cases involving unruly airline passengers to the FBI for possible criminal prosecutio­n since the number of disruption­s on flights began to spike in January.

“The unacceptab­le disruptive behavior that we’re seeing is a serious safety threat to flights, and we’re committed to our partnershi­p with the DOJ to combat it,” FAA Administra­tor Steve Dickson said.

Airlines and their unions have pressed the federal government to push more aggressive­ly for criminal prosecutio­n. Airlines have reported more than 5,000 incidents involving unruly passengers this year, with more than 3,600 of those involving people who refused to wear face masks as required by federal regulation.

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