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United Airlines investigation on dragged passenger: "Many things went wrong that day"

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The policy change should be simple: Don't overbook flights. I don't read anywhere where they say they will stop overbooking, so nothing will change.
 

ISOM

Member
The policy change should be simple: Don't overbook flights. I don't read anywhere where they say they will stop overbooking, so nothing will change.

The problem was the Airline's flight policy towards overbooked flight not being overbooked itself. If these changes are real then I don't see how this is not a real change to creating better customer service when problems like this occur in the future.
 
Overbooking should be illegal. If you buy a ticket to ride on something, you should be guaranteed a spot to ride on that thing. That's not an irrational concept.
 

djkimothy

Member
That's pretty damn good. $10K in flights...I'd take that.

There might be huge restrictions like a 1 year expiration date, restricted to north america or whatever. Not to mention i don't have enough vacation days to travel 10000$ worth of flight within a time frame and afford to make a trip out of it. it's still a crap deal and they're not obligated to give you the full amount.
 
I dunno, maybe he doesn't need money and wants to screw over united as much as possible

Enough of his personal information it out to know that he's not super rich. The kind of money United will throw at him for settlement will be life-changing money. He's also an older guy, and if he pushes this to trial, it'll drag out. Settlement money could be in his hands quickly. He could immediately retire and travel the world (but not on United or partner flights).
 
Enough of his personal information it out to know that he's not super rich. The kind of money United will throw at him for settlement will be life-changing money. He's also an older guy, and if he pushes this to trial, it'll drag out. Settlement money could be in his hands quickly. He could immediately retire and travel the world (but not on United or partner flights).
There's some upper middle class people who are fine with their life style and have a good retirement savings already saved up, maybe he doesn't really want a dramatic life change and cares more about damaging the company as a response and recognizes that taking this to trial would hurt them more than any settlement money would. You're probably right, but its not impossible he could refuse any amount of settlement money and not be an idit.
 

Goro Majima

Kitty Genovese Member
I dunno, maybe he doesn't need money and wants to screw over united as much as possible

I don't know how applicable this is but banks will typically settle out of court if they think they only have like a 75-80% chance of winning. When they don't settle and do go to court, that means they're very sure they're going to win.

If United's lawyers are doing similar math, it's entirely possible that United could still win and the guy won't get anything other than a legal bill.

Also his lawyers could be pushing him to take the settlement because they might not like their chances too much compared to a guaranteed payout
 
Also his lawyers could be pushing him to take the settlement because they might not like their chances too much compared to a guaranteed payout

There's no way United can win this lol.

Ignoring everything else (because literally everything that could have gone wrong in this case did go wrong), United have publicly stated on multiple occasions they were in the wrong.
 
lol something about the thread title make me think United Airlines was going to say they "had a big bowl of chili for lunch" that day, care of Alex Jones.
 
I don't know how applicable this is but banks will typically settle out of court if they think they only have like a 75-80% chance of winning. When they don't settle and do go to court, that means they're very sure they're going to win.

If United's lawyers are doing similar math, it's entirely possible that United could still win and the guy won't get anything other than a legal bill.

It's a little more complicated than that. The expected chance of prevailing is a factor, but so is the projected exposure and the plaintiff's settlement demand. Also, defendants take matters to trial for various reasons, and some are more logical than others.

Also, the plaintiff generally won't owe anything from losing. His attorneys front the costs and pay for litigation.

In this case, punitive damages are a big concern for United. This is a very public case with a lot of bad P.R. for United. The venue for the trial should also be in Cook County, Illinois (Chicago), and I bet jury verdicts are pretty good for plaintiffs there. And Illinois law in general is pretty plaintiff friendly from my understanding. I don't think United wants this going to trial at all.
 

Kenstar

Member
From what I understand, the off duty staff had to catch this flight because they were supposed to actually fly a plane out of their destination city. if they didnt get on this flight, hundreds of customers on the other flight would have been stranded on the airport.

So united chose to bump four passengers to make sure the 100+ passengers on the other plane had pilots and crew who could fly them out of there.

united chose to bump 4 passengers because they wanted a FREE ride on their own flight instead of paying to get 4 tickets

They could have bought a ticket like a normal person who needs to be somewhere, there's ALWAYS a way if you're willing to pay, hell every single commercial flight in the US could be 101% full and you can charter a 6 seater prop plane to take you wherever the fuck you wanna go

bet it wasn't worth the cost of 4 somewhat expensive tickets NOW though
 

Dunlop

Member
united chose to bump 4 passengers because they wanted a FREE ride on their own flight instead of paying to get 4 tickets

They could have bought a ticket like a normal person who needs to be somewhere, there's ALWAYS a way if you're willing to pay, hell every single commercial flight in the US could be 101% full and you can charter a 6 seater prop plane to take you wherever the fuck you wanna go

bet it wasn't worth the cost of 4 somewhat expensive tickets NOW though

I have flight attendant friends here in Canada, the airlines have deals to take each other staff in situations like this if there are vacant seats.

I assume it is the same thing in the US so it probably would not have cost a cent if there was another airline with vacant seats
 

Briarios

Member
My favorite part from the report:

Finally, the report said the airline has not provide regular training for employees on how to deal with “denied boarding situations.”

He wasn't denied boarding ... He was on board and in his paid seat lol that was their first mistake. From a two year old with a lollipop to a 100 year old with a bingo card, you don't give a person something they paid for, then take it away. There will be anger.
 

RPGCrazied

Member
He settled.

C-cQSvBXUAAxTPk.jpg:large
 

Sarye

Member
Keep in mind they were seeking punitive damage which means it'll be an amount that'll hurt United. It's definitely 7+ figures... maybe even 8+ as a previous poster here mentioned. No way is it less than a mil.
 

Lum1n3s

Member
Keep in mind they were seeking punitive damage which means it'll be an amount that'll hurt United. It's definitely 7+ figures... maybe even 8+ as a previous poster here mentioned. No way is it less than a mil.
I'm going with 8, a new thread should be made for this since we are derailing this one.
 

Kumquat

Member
This is not going to court for the dude's law suit. United has admitted their guilt up front here. It will be a settlement and everybody will be locked down by an NDA while United sings their Mea Culpa
 

Trouble

Banned
My guess is high seven or low eight digits. UA needed to settle this quickly and quietly. That doesn't come cheap with a competent lawyer representing the plaintiff.
 

Justin Bailey

------ ------
Why would he settle for that little? If this went to court he'd almost certainly win and easily get somewhere around 7 or 8 figures.

He'd also have to pay for a legal team to spend years to get there, after the appeals went through, and not even get guaranteed "7 or 8 figures."

Anyway, no real point in arguing it since it will never get released to the public.
 
He'd also have to pay for a legal team to spend years to get there, after the appeals went through, and not even get guaranteed "7 or 8 figures."

Anyway, no real point in arguing it since it will never get released to the public.

The optics of United taking this guy to court would be DEVASTATING for them. They lost a billion in a day in stocks thanks to this, what's 20 mil to stop the bleeding?
 

mr jones

Ethnicity is not a race!
No way it was in the millions on a settlement. 6 figs, maybe even 5.

lol that's McDonalds money, fam.

This dude is caught on camera being dragged off bleeding from a United airplane. United is going to be spending crazy money on "new focus" and "putting the customer first in everything we do".

He's AT LEAST getting millions. His LAWYERS will be seeing 5 or 6 figures.
 

B-Dubs

No Scrubs
He'd also have to pay for a legal team to spend years to get there, after the appeals went through, and not even get guaranteed "7 or 8 figures."

Anyway, no real point in arguing it since it will never get released to the public.

The company's stock price wouldn't be able to survive a protracted court proceeding. If anything they were more likely to be pushing for a settlement than the doctor.
 

correojon

Member
From what I understand, the off duty staff had to catch this flight because they were supposed to actually fly a plane out of their destination city. if they didnt get on this flight, hundreds of customers on the other flight would have been stranded on the airport.

So united chose to bump four passengers to make sure the 100+ passengers on the other plane had pilots and crew who could fly them out of there.

I´m pretty sure that if they´d had the will to, they could´ve found another way to get the crew there, get a replacement crew or find any other solution. Besides, only 2 people are required to fly a plane, not 4 and 2 people had already given up their seats. Also, note that nowhere has it been stated that the crew were pilots, they may even have all been stewards, which would´ve made it even easier to find replacements for the flight next day. And if anything failed, they didn´t have to fly until the next day and Louisville is only a 5 hour drive away if everything else failed.

They had a lot of options before having to consider denying service to a customer. They didn´t consider any of those for a second, because it was much easier to just take 4 passengers out, probably because for them their customers´satisfaction was at the very bottom of their priorities.
 

nomster

Member
He'd also have to pay for a legal team to spend years to get there, after the appeals went through, and not even get guaranteed "7 or 8 figures."

Anyway, no real point in arguing it since it will never get released to the public.

No, they'd work on a contingency
 

zou

Member
No way it was in the millions on a settlement. 6 figs, maybe even 5.

They just announced they would pay up to $10k in travel vouchers for any future (I)DBs, and you think the guy that was assaulted and forced them to change their policy would walk away with $90k. Get real.
 
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