Here's why a Delta passenger was kicked off a plane for using the bathroom
On April 18, Delta Flight 2035 was third in line for takeoff in Atlanta when passenger Kima Hamilton felt the urgent need to urinate, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported.
However, when Hamilton reached the rear lavatory of the McDonnell-Douglas MD88, a Delta flight attendant reportedly told him that the plane will lose its place in line if he used the restroom - so Hamilton returned to his seat.
According to Hamilton, the urge returned after an extended wait and grew in intensity, so the passenger decided to defy the crew member's order and used the restroom.
"We weren't taking off. We were still. The plane isn't moving," he told the publication.
Hamilton's decision to get up while the aircraft was taxiing, along with his decision to defy the crew orders and visit the plane's aft lavatory caused the Milwaukee-bound flight to return to the gate. In video posted on YouTube by a fellow passenger, an airline employee is shown asking Hamilton to exit the aircraft while he pleaded his case to remain on board. At the gate, all passengers were eventually forced to deplane while Hamilton was met by airline employees and law enforcement.
Footage of unpleasant passenger interactions with airline employees is appearing regularly on social media lately, as travelers armed with smartphone cameras record every incident. The most shocking, of course, was the violent removal of a passenger from a from United Airlines flight after he refused to give up his seat. Fury over the incident, which left the passenger seriously injured prompted a series of apologies from United and - on Thursday - a plan to ensure that something like it will never happen again.
It's not just United and Delta. Last week, an American Airlines flight attendant was suspended after getting into a heated confrontation on board a flight that was recorded by a traveler. The flight attendant ripped a stroller out of the hands of a mother and nearly struck her young child in the process.
In the latest case, the requirement for passengers to remain seated while taxiing is not a Delta Air Lines rule, but rather federal aviation regulation.
According to Delta, the crew's account of the event differs from that of the passenger, but the airline declined to go into detail.
In a statement to Business Insider, Delta wrote, " Our flight crews are extensively trained to ensure the safety and security of all customers. It is imperative that passengers comply with crew instructions during all phases of flight, especially at the critical points of takeoff and landing."
The regulations say the "fasten seat belt sign"must be turned on while the aircraft is in movement on the ground, during landing, takeoff, or when the pilot in command sees fit, that all passengers must remain seated with their seat belts fastened when the sign is on, and finally that all passengers must comply with orders given to him or her by the crew in regards to seating.
However, what isn't clear is how much latitude employee at Delta and other airlines have to make judgment calls in instances such as Flight 2035. Again, Delta declined to go into detail.
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