Dr. David Dao's Lawyer DESTROYS United Airlines Over and Over Again
"Are we going to continue being treated like cattle?" - Lawyer for a
United Airlines passenger fires off on the airline for their use of
excessive force on his client. This came in lieu of a viral video which
showed the passenger, Dr. David Dao, being forcibly removed from a
United flight, after his refusal to relinquesh his seat.
The Lawyer lambasted the airline for what he called a culture of 'bullying' , which he claims to be widespread through out the airline industry.
The Lawyer lambasted the airline for what he called a culture of 'bullying' , which he claims to be widespread through out the airline industry.
United Airline Passenger Brutalized And Dragged Off Plane (VIDEO)
A doctor was forcibly removed from a United flight for not giving up the
seat that he paid for. Ana Kasparian and John Iadarola, the hosts of
The Young Turks, break it down. Tell us what you think in the comment
section below. https://www.tytnetwork.com/go
“A common overbooking problem on a United Airlines flight on Sunday ended with a man being bloodied and dragged from his seat and an already troubled airline earning more bad press. How did it all go so wrong?
Overbooking on flights happens all the time. Empty seats cost airlines money, so they offset the number of passengers who miss flights by selling too many tickets.
In this case, the problem arose because United decided at the last minute to fly four members of staff to a connection point and needed to bump four passengers to make way for them.
When there's an overbooking issue the first step is to offer an inducement to the passengers to take a later flight. On Sunday passengers were offered $400 (£322), a hotel room for the night, and a flight the following afternoon.
When no one took the offer, the amount was upped to $800. Still no one bit, so a manager boarded the flight and informed passengers that four people would be selected to leave the flight.
That selection is based on several factors, but frequent fliers and higher fare-paying passengers are given priority to stay aboard, a spokeswoman for United confirmed.”
“A common overbooking problem on a United Airlines flight on Sunday ended with a man being bloodied and dragged from his seat and an already troubled airline earning more bad press. How did it all go so wrong?
Overbooking on flights happens all the time. Empty seats cost airlines money, so they offset the number of passengers who miss flights by selling too many tickets.
In this case, the problem arose because United decided at the last minute to fly four members of staff to a connection point and needed to bump four passengers to make way for them.
When there's an overbooking issue the first step is to offer an inducement to the passengers to take a later flight. On Sunday passengers were offered $400 (£322), a hotel room for the night, and a flight the following afternoon.
When no one took the offer, the amount was upped to $800. Still no one bit, so a manager boarded the flight and informed passengers that four people would be selected to leave the flight.
That selection is based on several factors, but frequent fliers and higher fare-paying passengers are given priority to stay aboard, a spokeswoman for United confirmed.”
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