fine, i think that will send a message to others out there who are thinking about acting up. the largest new fine proposed by the faa is against a passenger accused of throwing his luggage at another passenger laying on the aisle floor and then grabbing a flight attendant by the ankles and putting his head up her skirt. that flight from new york to orlando was forced to land early in virginia. two-thirds of new fines involve passengers violating the transportation mask mandate, and about a quarter involve passengers illegally bringing their own alcohol on board. now the faa is pleading with airports to crack down on to go alcohol sales to help ground unruly passengers before they ever get in the air. when people start getting put in jail for their actions on the planes that are putting everyone in jeopardy, there s going to be some serious sobering up. reporter: just today american airlines announced it will not sever alcohol on board its flights until at least january 18th, 2022
reporter: at the white house today, president biden and his advisers scrambling to bring order to the chaotic evacuation of tens of thousands of americans and afghan allies from taliban-controlled kabul. the commitments holds to get everyone out that in fact we can get out and everyone that should come out and that s the objective. reporter: yet, so far the evacuations are moving slowly. more than 5,000 american troops are n control of the airport, but it s the taliban that decides who can make it there. the president defiant and defensive, but now leaving open the possibility of keeping u.s. forces longer than a self-imposed timeline of august 31st. if there s americans citizens left, we re going to stay to get them all out. reporter: but the guarantee does not necessarily extend to all afghans who worked alongside americans. one who spent years working at the u.s. embassy telling cnn the journey was too harrowing to finish saying i decided i would rather the taliban shoot m