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Family of TWENTY booted off American Airlines flight for ‘improper mask-wearing’

Family of TWENTY booted off American Airlines flight for ‘improper mask-wearing’

A family of 20, including 10 children, was forced off an American Airlines flight over a trivial violation of the company’s mask policy, one family member claims, insisting his face covering only briefly slipped under his nose.

While boarding a flight at the Salt Lake City International Airport along with 19 relatives on Sunday, Scott Wilson said he was asked to fix his mask after it momentarily slid down his face. Though he says he “dropped everything” and corrected the issue before finding his seat, the family was soon accosted by a gate agent.

“He said, ‘Well, [the crew wants] you to leave the plane,’” Wilson told Salt Lake City’s KSL. “I said, ‘What, they want us to get off the plane? Can we talk, can we have a conversation?’ Nobody has even really talked to us.”

According to Wilson, the agent left for a short time, but returned saying that the captain of the flight crew insisted they be removed from the plane. “I’m sorry, it has to be the whole family,” the airline employee reportedly said.

The entire family, consisting of 10 adults and 10 children aged between 3 and 13, was then made to leave the aircraft – but not without a fight from fellow passengers, Wilson said.

“There was actually a couple of families around us that stood up and was like, ‘This is wrong, that guy is being a jerk,’” he said, referring to the gate agent. “‘He was yelling at other people as they came on, too, and he was already mad at these guys. They didn’t do anything.’”


A witness to the confrontation told KSL the family’s removal was not justified and that Wilson was complying with the mask rule, adding that he tried to speak with an airline employee to undo the decision, but it was too late.

Other staff were more sympathetic, however, helping the family to rebook separate flights through American Airlines, Delta and United, getting them to their destination in Hawaii on the same day.

“They were livid,” Wilson said of the more agreeable gate agents.

"They were mad at this guy and said, ‘He is the one with the problem, you guys did nothing wrong. We’ve never seen anything like this. We’ve never had a situation like this, and he was totally in the wrong by doing what he did.’"


American Airlines addressed the incident in a statement, saying the family was reported to be violating the company’s mask policies, which require face coverings be “worn properly over the nose and mouth at all times.”

“Per procedure, the customers involved were asked to exit the aircraft before departure and the flight departed for [Dallas-Fort Worth] shortly after,” an airline spokesperson told a local ABC affiliate, adding that the passengers were reminded about the rule.

“After having a conversation with the group, our team at [Salt Lake City] confirmed with the customers that they agree to comply with the face-covering policy if they were rebooked on flights to their destination. They ultimately agreed and were rebooked to complete their travel,” the spokesperson continued.

American Airlines imposed its mask policy in May of last year, as the first wave of the coronavirus pandemic surged through the US, but the company has since stiffened penalties for violators, announcing in June that it “may deny future travel” for those caught with their masks down.

The Salt Lake City airport is no stranger to controversies, seeing a gang of hecklers berate Republican Senator Mitt Romney on a Delta flight earlier this month. Delta has since banned the passengers involved, who are among 880 people placed on the airline’s no-fly list in recent weeks over non-compliance with its mask policy and other violations.

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