American Airlines is being sued by three Black men, Alvin Jackson, Emmanuel Jean Joseph, and Xavier Veal, who claim they were forced to deboard a flight due to a complaint about body odor. The lawsuit, filed in the US District Court for the Eastern District of New York, concerns a January 5 flight from Phoenix to New York.
Incident details
According to the lawsuit, the three men were approached individually by an American Airlines representative and asked to leave the plane without explanation. They noticed that only Black men were being asked to deboard, with five others also removed. The men were informed they couldn’t fly on that flight and needed to rebook. The reason given was a white male flight attendant’s complaint about an unidentified passenger’s body odor, though none of the men were directly accused of this.
Allegations of racial discrimination
The men argue that their removal was racially motivated. At least one airline representative reportedly admitted as much, and the pilot announced to the remaining passengers that the men were removed due to a body odor complaint. The plaintiffs have asserted that such an incident would not have occurred if the passengers were white.
Plaintiffs’ statement
In a statement to The Guardian, the men expressed their frustration and humiliation: “Imagine a flight attendant ordering every white person off a plane because of a complaint about one white person. That would never happen. But that is what happened to us. There is no explanation other than the color of our skin. American Airlines singled us out for being Black, embarrassed us, and humiliated us. Clearly, this was discrimination.”