After causing a commotion on a cross-country flight from Dulles International Airport to Seattle-Tacoma International Airport last Thursday, 14 passengers who defied mask-wearing mandates have been banned by Alaska Airlines. A number of passengers on board Alaska Airlines flight 1085 from Washington Dulles to Seattle were non-mask compliant, rowdy, argumentative, and harassed our crew members, the airline said in a statement provided to
Travel + Leisure about the Jan. 7 incident. Their behavior was unacceptable. Because of their actions and noncompliance, we have banned 14 of those passengers from future travel with us. We apologize to our other guests who were made uncomfortable on the flight.
Fourteen passengers are banned from future travel on Alaska Airlines after being rowdy on a flight Thursday from Dulles International Airport to Sea-Tac.
14 people may be banned after rowdy D C to Seattle flight sfgate.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sfgate.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
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Alaska Airlines has banned more than a dozen passengers whose behavior was deemed unacceptable on a recent flight from Washington, D.C., to Seattle.
An airline spokesperson had previously confirmed to Fox News that the carrier was considering such actions after the passengers, of which there were at least 14, had refused to wear masks (as per Alaska’s current coronavirus policy) and also harassed crew members during the flight, which took off from Dulles International Airport for Seattle-Tacoma International Airport on Thursday. Last night, a number of passengers on board Alaska Airlines Flight 1085 from Washington Dulles to Seattle were non-mask compliant, rowdy, argumentative and harassed our crew members. Their behavior was unacceptable, a spokesperson for the carrier said in a statement obtained by Fox News last week.
Pro-Trump rioters who stormed the U.S. Capitol should be added to the federal no-fly list, the chair of the House Committee on Homeland Security said on Thursday.
The call to ban those who breached the Capitol building from flying came as airlines began to step up security for flights in and out of the nation s capital, and American Airlines ceased serving alcohol on area flights. It also followed reports of passengers demonstrating politically motivated aggression on flights to Washington D.C. prior to the riot. Given the heinous domestic terrorist attack on the U.S. Capitol yesterday, I am urging the Transportation Security Administration and the Federal Bureau of Investigation to use their authorities to add the names of all identified individuals involved in the attack to the federal No-Fly List and keep them off planes, Rep. Bennie G. Thompson, a democrat from Mississippi and the chair of the Committee on Homeland Security, said in a statement. This should include all i