- A passenger on a Frontier flight was taped to his seat after assaulting flight attendants.
- The passenger groped female crew members and punched a male crew member in the face.
- He was arrested upon landing in Miami and could face stiff penalties.
A
According to Philadelphia's ABC affiliate, 22-year-old Maxwell Berry was arrested after traveling on a flight from Philadelphia to Miami on Saturday.
Berry, who had two drinks while on the flight, used his empty cup to touch a female flight attendant's backside. He ordered a third drink which he spilled on his shirt, then went into the plane's bathroom, emerging shirtless.
After a flight attendant helped him get a new shirt from his carry-on bag, he proceeded to walk around the plane for roughly 15 minutes before groping the chests of multiple female flight attendants. A male flight attendant then came over to Berry's seat to watch him, and Berry punched him in the face.
He was ultimately duct-taped to his seat for the remainder of the flight and was arrested after the plane landed, according to ABC.
A passenger on the flight captured video of the incident, which was posted on Twitter by ABC reporter Sam Sweeney. In the video, Berry can be heard screaming "You guys f------ suck" and claiming that his parents are worth "more than 2 million g--d--- dollars."
-Sam Sweeney (@SweeneyABC) August 3, 2021
A spokesperson for Frontier
"During a flight from Philadelphia to Miami on July 31, a passenger made inappropriate physical contact with a flight attendant and subsequently physically assaulted another flight attendant. As a result, the passenger needed to be restrained until the flight landed in Miami and law enforcement arrived," the spokesperson told ABC.
Sara Nelson, president of the Association of Flight Attendants-CWA, said in a statement that the situation was "one of the worst examples" of passenger behavior on flights this year and condemned Frontier for suspending the crew members.
"We will be fighting this with every contractual and legal tool available, but we would hope there will be no need for that as management comes to their senses and supports the people on the frontline charged with keeping all passengers safe," she said.
"If this is not immediately corrected, flight attendants may feel unsafe to come to work," she added.
Frontier later issued a new statement emphasizing that the crew members involved were put on paid leave, not suspension, while the issue is being investigated, and said that the company is working with law enforcement to "fully support the prosecution of the passenger involved."
The altercation follows a similar episode last month where a female passenger was duct-taped to her seat after reportedly trying to open the door mid-flight and assaulting flight attendants. The incident took place on an American Airlines flight from Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas, to Charlotte, North Carolina.
These events come amid a rise in passenger aggression on