New York Daily News

Bloodied, dragged off jet after United bumps him

- BY BRIAN LISI and DENIS SLATTERY

VIDEO OF COPS forcibly dragging a United Airlines passenger from his seat on an overbooked flight went viral on Monday, sparking turbulence before the plane got off the ground.

Some of the shocked passengers gasped in disbelief at O’Hare Airport in Chicago. Others recorded the Sunday evening clash on their cell phones, as the passenger who refused to give up his seat was left bloodied.

“Please, my God!” a passenger hollered.

“What are you doing?” asked another.

“This is wrong,” a passenger said. “Look at what you did to him.”

The confrontat­ion raised questions about the aggressive tactics and whether the airline or police had the right to boot a paying customer from the flight.

The 5:40 p.m. flight to Louisville, Ky., was delayed two hours, according to airline officials. After passengers finally boarded the flight, United asked for volunteers to give up their seats to four United employees who needed to be in Louisville on Monday for a flight.

When no one budged, it was announced that passengers would be randomly selected for removal.

In the video, officers grab the screaming man from a window seat, pull him across the armrest and drag him down the aisle by his arms.

A spokesman for the company insisted that employees had no choice but to ask authoritie­s to remove the man. Officials claimed he was belligeren­t.

Passenger Audra Bridges posted the video on Facebook. Her husband, Tyler Bridges, told The Associated Press that United offered $400 and then $800 vouchers and a hotel stay for volunteers to give up their seats.

When no one accepted, a United manager came aboard and announced that passengers would be chosen at random.

“We almost felt like we were being taken hostage,” Tyler Bridges said. “We were stuck there. You can’t do anything as a traveler. You’re relying on the airline.”

When airline employees named four customers who had to leave the plane, three of them did so. The fourth person refused to move, and police were called, United spokesman Charlie Hobart said.

“We followed the right procedures,” Hobart told The Associated Press in a phone interview. “That plane had to depart. We wanted to get our customers to their destinatio­ns.”

Bridges said the man became upset, and claimed he was a doctor who needed to see patients at a hospital in the morning.

The ejected man, whom the Louisville Courier-Journal identified as Dr. David Dao, citing a newspaper source, was recorded reentering the plane, disoriente­d and bleeding, before the entire flight was evacuated.

After a three-hour delay the flight took off without the man aboard, Bridges said.

Most major airlines overbook flights to avoid empty seats on a plane. While there was no explanatio­n as to how the airline chooses which passengers to boot when a flight is overbooked, United’s website says, “Passengers may be denied boarding involuntar­ily in accordance with UA’s boarding priority.” The Department of Transporta­tion is reviewing the incident. One officer involved has been placed on leave, the Chicago Aviation Department said Monday.

The incident comes two weeks after United was criticized for barring two teenage girls from a flight because they were wearing leggings.

 ??  ?? Stunned passengers record video as police forcibly remove man who claims he’s a doctor from overbooked United Airlines flight leaving Chicago’s O’Hare Airport on Sunday. The airline said it needed the seat for its own employee.
Stunned passengers record video as police forcibly remove man who claims he’s a doctor from overbooked United Airlines flight leaving Chicago’s O’Hare Airport on Sunday. The airline said it needed the seat for its own employee.

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