Airline sends big bill to passenger for flight return to London - 2 minutes read
Airline sends big bill to passenger for flight return to London
A passenger accused of severe misbehaviour on a Jet2 flight that had to return to London's Stansted Airport in June has received a huge bill from the airline.
The airline has accused Chloe Haines of "aggressive, abusive and dangerous behaviour" on a flight and sent her a bill for £85,000 ($NZ 157,000).
She has also been banned from the airline for the rest of her life.
Officials say the plane bound for Turkey had to return to Stansted and was escorted by two Royal Air Force Typhoon fighter jets.
READ MORE: * Passenger tries to open door mid-air on Jet2 flight, leading to fighter-jet escort * 'Disruptive passenger' arrested after plane's u-turn worried about missing his flight, police say * Fight 'chaos' causes Ryanair flight to be diverted
The 25-year-old British woman was arrested by Essex Police when the plane landed and is free on bail.
She was arrested on suspicion of common assault, criminal damage and endangering an aircraft. She is scheduled to be in court August 21.
Jet2's CEO Steve Heapy said Thursday that the airline will try to recover the costs incurred as a result of the diversion.
Haines said Haines' actions were "one of the most serious cases of disruptive passenger behaviour that we have experienced."
He said Jet2 takes "an absolutely zero tolerance approach to disruptive behaviour, and we hope that this sobering incident, with its very serious consequences, provides a stark warning to others who think that they can behave in this fashion."
Source: Stuff.co.nz
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Airline • London • Jet2.com • London • London Stansted Airport • Airline • Airline • Risk • New Zealand dollar • Airline • Turkey • London Stansted Airport • Royal Air Force • Eurofighter Typhoon • Fighter aircraft • Aviation • Jet2.com • Flight International • Fighter aircraft • Airplane • The Amazing Race • Ryanair • Essex Police • Bail • Common assault • Property damage • Jet2.com • Airline • Jet2.com • Zero tolerance •
A passenger accused of severe misbehaviour on a Jet2 flight that had to return to London's Stansted Airport in June has received a huge bill from the airline.
The airline has accused Chloe Haines of "aggressive, abusive and dangerous behaviour" on a flight and sent her a bill for £85,000 ($NZ 157,000).
She has also been banned from the airline for the rest of her life.
Officials say the plane bound for Turkey had to return to Stansted and was escorted by two Royal Air Force Typhoon fighter jets.
READ MORE: * Passenger tries to open door mid-air on Jet2 flight, leading to fighter-jet escort * 'Disruptive passenger' arrested after plane's u-turn worried about missing his flight, police say * Fight 'chaos' causes Ryanair flight to be diverted
The 25-year-old British woman was arrested by Essex Police when the plane landed and is free on bail.
She was arrested on suspicion of common assault, criminal damage and endangering an aircraft. She is scheduled to be in court August 21.
Jet2's CEO Steve Heapy said Thursday that the airline will try to recover the costs incurred as a result of the diversion.
Haines said Haines' actions were "one of the most serious cases of disruptive passenger behaviour that we have experienced."
He said Jet2 takes "an absolutely zero tolerance approach to disruptive behaviour, and we hope that this sobering incident, with its very serious consequences, provides a stark warning to others who think that they can behave in this fashion."
Source: Stuff.co.nz
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
Airline • London • Jet2.com • London • London Stansted Airport • Airline • Airline • Risk • New Zealand dollar • Airline • Turkey • London Stansted Airport • Royal Air Force • Eurofighter Typhoon • Fighter aircraft • Aviation • Jet2.com • Flight International • Fighter aircraft • Airplane • The Amazing Race • Ryanair • Essex Police • Bail • Common assault • Property damage • Jet2.com • Airline • Jet2.com • Zero tolerance •