Pair thrown off plane for graphic shirt
Moderators: Tunnelcat, Jeff250
Pair thrown off plane for graphic shirt
heh
Posted on Sun, Aug. 01, 2004
MIAMI
Pair thrown off plane for graphic shirt
A flight from Miami to New York was delayed and two passengers were escorted off the plane when one refused to remove a T-shirt a crew member found obscene.
BY KARL ROSS
kross@herald.com
Two travelers were removed Saturday from a New York-bound flight at Miami International Airport because a crew member considered a T-shirt one of them was wearing obscene.
The couple, making a connecting flight from Costa Rica, claimed American Airlines violated their constitutional right to free speech.
They said nobody on the earlier flight objected to the T-shirt that Oscar Arela was wearing.
''It's a picture of a man and woman, and the woman's breast is showing,'' said Arela's girlfriend, Tala Tow, speaking to The Herald on her cellphone as she was being escorted off the plane. ``The flight attendant basically walked up to us and yelled, `You have to take off that shirt right now.'
''This is unbelievable. Our rights are being violated,'' she said.
The company, through a spokesman, said crew members acted properly and had broad authority to enforce standards of common decency.
''The description I heard was a picture of a graphic of a naked man and woman performing a sexual act,'' airline spokesman Tim Wagner, said from Fort Worth, Texas. 'We as an airline are in the service business, and we have the same latitude as a restaurant that says `proper attire' is required.''
Tow said four Miami-Dade police and three federal security agents escorted her and Arela off American Airlines Flight 952.
A police supervisor at MIA confirmed police responded to the incident.
Wagner said the couple had not committed a crime, but could legally be barred from the flight.
He said Arela was given the opportunity to turn the shirt inside-out or change it.
''At that point, we had to enlist the help of law enforcement,'' he said.
Wagner said the flight was scheduled to depart at 5:56 p.m. but did not get off the ground until 7:32 p.m. because of the incident.
Tow said she felt ''humiliated'' because other passengers were yelling at them to leave before authorities could remove them.
''We have not committed a crime. We're expressing our right to free speech, and people are like yelling at us now,'' she said.
Tow said she and Arela paid $700 each for the round-trip tickets to Costa Rica, where they were vacationing.
She said the image on her boyfriend's shirt was reproduced from a Venezuelan record label.
Posted on Sun, Aug. 01, 2004
MIAMI
Pair thrown off plane for graphic shirt
A flight from Miami to New York was delayed and two passengers were escorted off the plane when one refused to remove a T-shirt a crew member found obscene.
BY KARL ROSS
kross@herald.com
Two travelers were removed Saturday from a New York-bound flight at Miami International Airport because a crew member considered a T-shirt one of them was wearing obscene.
The couple, making a connecting flight from Costa Rica, claimed American Airlines violated their constitutional right to free speech.
They said nobody on the earlier flight objected to the T-shirt that Oscar Arela was wearing.
''It's a picture of a man and woman, and the woman's breast is showing,'' said Arela's girlfriend, Tala Tow, speaking to The Herald on her cellphone as she was being escorted off the plane. ``The flight attendant basically walked up to us and yelled, `You have to take off that shirt right now.'
''This is unbelievable. Our rights are being violated,'' she said.
The company, through a spokesman, said crew members acted properly and had broad authority to enforce standards of common decency.
''The description I heard was a picture of a graphic of a naked man and woman performing a sexual act,'' airline spokesman Tim Wagner, said from Fort Worth, Texas. 'We as an airline are in the service business, and we have the same latitude as a restaurant that says `proper attire' is required.''
Tow said four Miami-Dade police and three federal security agents escorted her and Arela off American Airlines Flight 952.
A police supervisor at MIA confirmed police responded to the incident.
Wagner said the couple had not committed a crime, but could legally be barred from the flight.
He said Arela was given the opportunity to turn the shirt inside-out or change it.
''At that point, we had to enlist the help of law enforcement,'' he said.
Wagner said the flight was scheduled to depart at 5:56 p.m. but did not get off the ground until 7:32 p.m. because of the incident.
Tow said she felt ''humiliated'' because other passengers were yelling at them to leave before authorities could remove them.
''We have not committed a crime. We're expressing our right to free speech, and people are like yelling at us now,'' she said.
Tow said she and Arela paid $700 each for the round-trip tickets to Costa Rica, where they were vacationing.
She said the image on her boyfriend's shirt was reproduced from a Venezuelan record label.
- STRESSTEST
- DBB DemiGod
- Posts: 6574
- Joined: Sun Nov 21, 1999 3:01 am
-
- DBB Admiral
- Posts: 1557
- Joined: Sun Oct 07, 2001 2:01 am
- Location: Richmond,B. C., Canada
- Viralphrame
- DBB Ace
- Posts: 419
- Joined: Thu Jan 30, 2003 3:01 am
- Contact:
-
- Defender of the Night
- Posts: 13477
- Joined: Thu Nov 05, 1998 12:01 pm
- Location: Olathe, KS
- Contact:
Of course not, thats private property. A commercial airline is not however on private property.DCrazy wrote:Okay, do I have to enumerate what I allow and disallow the next time someone comes to visit me? Nope, if I want to kick you out, I can. It's just not in the airline's best interests to kick too many people out.
My point is, they can easily file a complaint and make a HUGE stink over this making the airline look bad because of one ★■◆● employee. He could have easily taken them aside and dealt with it quietly without much of a fuss. Unless things have changed, there is no sign saying they can't wear such attire (other than a no shirt, no shoes, no service banner on the doors, which is just about everywhere these days.) They obviously got past security and other employees so its quite clear that its not a company policy.
Well, that just means the mall's owners don't care/don't know about it. Maybe the mall has different rules. I went to a private beach one time that allowed nudity. Does that mean I should be able to strip naked on an airplane? Does this mean that I have a case when they throw my tanned ass off the plane?
How is your post relevant in any way to the topic at hand?
That was their opportunity to quietly deal with it.
''We have not committed a crime. We're expressing our right to free speech, and people are like yelling at us now,'' she said.
Someone should have asked this Mensa candidate what statement the shirt was trying to make.
How is your post relevant in any way to the topic at hand?
"He said Arela was given the opportunity to turn the shirt inside-out or change it."He could have easily taken them aside and dealt with it quietly without much of a fuss.
That was their opportunity to quietly deal with it.
''We have not committed a crime. We're expressing our right to free speech, and people are like yelling at us now,'' she said.
Someone should have asked this Mensa candidate what statement the shirt was trying to make.
- Lothar
- DBB Ghost Admin
- Posts: 12133
- Joined: Thu Nov 05, 1998 12:01 pm
- Location: I'm so glad to be home
- Contact:
I've heard of a few.Ferno wrote:I don't see people being thrown out of malls for wearing offensive shirts
When you buy an airline ticket, it comes with quite a bit of paperwork. I think somewhere in there is a disclaimer along the lines people here have asked for. Next time you get ready to fly, read through everything you get and see if there's something like that...
Ive also heard of a few. I think I read one time that some guy got charged with criminal tresspas because the mall owner didnt like his politically slanted t-shirt and he didnt leave immediately when asked. I cant remember exactly which way the shirt leaned...but I think it might have been to the right, believe it or not. Maybe a pro-war t-shirt.Ferno wrote:I don't see people being thrown out of malls for wearing offensive shirts.. and malls are private property.
I say the guy is an idiot. I would have turned my shirt inside out or pulled a sweater over it, and get on with my flight already!
If that guy got so cocky about his right to free speech, he got what he diserved. Sometimes people need to use some common sense instead of trying to wield all their rights to the maximum extent. Free speech is a right, not a mandatory obligation.
If that guy got so cocky about his right to free speech, he got what he diserved. Sometimes people need to use some common sense instead of trying to wield all their rights to the maximum extent. Free speech is a right, not a mandatory obligation.
-
- DBB Admiral
- Posts: 1618
- Joined: Tue Oct 17, 2000 2:01 am
- Hattrick
- DBB Admiral
- Posts: 1114
- Joined: Thu Jul 19, 2001 2:01 am
- Location: Southern Oregon
- Contact:
I'd have to go with Tricord on this one. If it was me I woulda did whatever to get on with the flight.
@ MD The airport may be public land but the plane the guy was standing in was owned by a private business and they can refuse the right to service to anyone for any reason!
I'll give you that not approving of a t shirt is a pretty weak reason but still it falls under the "any" domain.
Just my 1/3 cent. -Hat
@ MD The airport may be public land but the plane the guy was standing in was owned by a private business and they can refuse the right to service to anyone for any reason!
I'll give you that not approving of a t shirt is a pretty weak reason but still it falls under the "any" domain.
Just my 1/3 cent. -Hat
-
- DBB Ace
- Posts: 25
- Joined: Tue Jul 27, 2004 1:24 pm
- Location: .......
- Contact:
hmmm i wonder how this could ever have been called a "Violation of free speeche rights" they didnt get kicked off because of what he said, its because of what he was wearing, it makes no sense to me how everyone keeps calling things and incidents like this violations of free speechif i walked into a store used a gun to kill the clerk and grabbed the money and left would it make sense to say in my defense i was just using my right to freedom of speech? sigh .........
The way I look at it: There are some parties (mainly young children) that simply don't need to see that sort of stuff. If the stewardess hadn't pissed the guy wearing the shirt off, surely a number of the passengers (esp. ones with young children) would have been pissed off. So, by making the big hubub about it, they probably ended up loosing more customers than they would have lost if they hadn't done anything about it. But, no matter how they handled it at that point, they where probably going to lose customers. The answer: have security screen for inappropriate clothing.
Freedom of speech is essentially freedom of expression- shooting someone is an expression of ones self, I suppose- but freedom of speech isn't a universal thing. Mostly, what that amendment is trying to prevent the government from telling people how they have to think. You can think whatever you please, and are free to express that in whatever appropriate and peaceful means you would like. But, that's a control on the government, not on the individuals of the U.S., and someone has to define what "appropriate" and "peaceful" exactly means.hybrid of shadowfox&b wrote:hmmm i wonder how this could ever have been called a "Violation of free speeche rights" they didnt get kicked off because of what he said, its because of what he was wearing, it makes no sense to me how everyone keeps calling things and incidents like this violations of free speechif i walked into a store used a gun to kill the clerk and grabbed the money and left would it make sense to say in my defense i was just using my right to freedom of speech? sigh .........
-
- DBB Admiral
- Posts: 1699
- Joined: Thu Mar 23, 2000 3:01 am