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JetBlue, TSA Workers Pay $240,000 to Settle T-Shirt Lawsuit

By Barbara E. Hernandez | Jan 6, 2009

JetBlue Airways and two U.S. Transportation Security Administration officials paid $240,000 to settle a lawsuit that charged the two groups barred a man from a flight until he covered his T-shirt with an Arabic phrase.

The money was paid Friday to Raed Jarrar, a 30-year-old Iraqi-born U.S. resident who lives in Washington, D.C. and is married to an American citizen. Jarrar alleged that he was prevented from boarding an August 2006 flight to Oakland, Calif. because he was wearing a T-shirt that said, “We Will Not Be Silent” in both English and Arabic. He said he wasn’t allowed to board until he covered the shirt and was seated at the rear of the plane. “I proved my point. And now I think it’s pretty clear what they did to me was very wrong and should not be repeated with anyone,” Jarrar told the Washington Post.  Jarrar was represented by the American Civil Liberties Union.

Representatives for JetBlue and the two TSA employees named in the suit, denied any wrongdoing and said they settled because of legal costs. “JetBlue continues to deny, outright, every critical aspect of Mr. Jarrar’s version of events,” airline spokeswoman Alison Croyle said in an e-mailed statement.

Discrimination suits are rare because pilots have so much latitude in choosing who does or doesn’t board the plane, civil rights attorneys said, and it’s difficult to prove discrimination if customers are offered other flights.

The settlement came as AirTran Airways publicly apologized to nine Muslim American passengers  removed from a New Year’s Day flight out of Reagan Washington National Airport, and who threatened a lawsuit. The family was removed after a couple of family members began talking about the safest place to sit on the plane which allegedly disturbed other passengers.

The two cases, at least to me, show that there are limits to pilots’ latitude, especially when it appears to be based on discrimination or prejudice. Perhaps a pilot decides it best to have a family removed, or a T-shirt allegedly covered, to keep the majority of his or her passengers calm. But when does that stop becoming a safety concern and becomes more about prejudice and xenophobia? It’s the pilot’s and crew’s duty to be sensitive to different cultures, even if it means discounting other passengers’ outdated beliefs. Perhaps now, with allegations of discrimination showing how costly that behavior can be for airlines, that may happen. 

Bay Area resident and award-winning business journalist Barbara E. Hernandez has covered tourism, real estate and personal finance. Her clients include the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, San Francisco Chronicle and Washington Post.

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  •  
    1

    otisjose@...

    01/07/09 | Report as spam

    RE: JetBlue, TSA Workers Pay $240,000 to Settle T-Shirt Lawsuit

    I say to Mr. Jarrar or whatever his name is......TOO BAD! If you want to live in America, then act like an American. I think JetBlue had every right to make that damn terrorist bastard cover his shirt. "We will not be silent"...what does that mean? Who is "WE?" I though the was an "American" citizen. Sure doesn't sound like it. It sounds like he's associating himself with Iraquis or terrorists. I just hope they made him take his smelly ass turbin off his head too. It's all "unfair" until he highjacks the plane and slams it into a building.

  •  
    2

    janismara@...

    01/07/09 | Report as spam

    RE: JetBlue, TSA Workers Pay $240,000 to Settle T-Shirt Lawsuit

    Great headline. While not a disaster, this seems like another bad PR event for JetBlue.

  •  
    3

    wasupdog

    01/07/09 | Report as spam

    RE: JetBlue, TSA Workers Pay $240,000 to Settle T-Shirt Lawsuit

    I think it's b.s. I would be suspicious of an iraqi wearing that shirt on a plane i was about to board. What is "we will not be silent"? Are you going to try to make your cause heard by doing something on this flight? That is a stupid choice of a shirt to wear onto a plane.If your this guy and you don't want to be hassled, wear a regular shirt when you fly. How did they come up with $240,000. I say refund his ticket and that's it.

  •  
    4

    SHANNY1943

    01/08/09 | Report as spam

    RE: JetBlue, TSA Workers Pay $240,000 to Settle T-Shirt Lawsuit

    I'M IN TOTAL AGREEMENT WITH "WASUPDOG" AND "OTISJOSE". WE SEE HOW PEOPLE IN THE MIDDLE EAST TREAT ANY AMERICAN SUPPORT, USUALLY WITH VIOLENCE. WE EXPECT THE AIRLINES TO MAINTAIN ORDER AND SAFETY ON OUR FLIGHTS. I FEEL THAT T-SHIRT WAS DISPLAYED INTENTIONALLY TO DISRRUPT THE USUAL CALM OF THE FLIGHT. TO BE PC I KNOW THE ACLU LOONS WOULDN'T WANT ANYONE TO STEREOTYPE A MIDDLE EASTERNER, BUT, BY GOLLY, I DO EVERY TIME I FLY.THEY BROUGHT THIS ON THEMSELVES.
    GO JETBLUE....
    SHANNY**43

  •  
    5

    brett snyder

    01/08/09 | Report as spam

    RE: JetBlue, TSA Workers Pay $240,000 to Settle T-Shirt Lawsuit

    Are you all serious? By wearing this t-shirt, there's no reason he shouldn't expect extra security screening from the process, but for him to be denied boarding unless he covered up his shirt is absurd. Is there some magical bomb that goes off when Arabic is viewable? Clearly they didn't see a real security threat since they would have allowed him to board with his shirt covered up. Requiring it to be covered is discriminatory.

  •  
    6

    safeteeguy

    01/08/09 | Report as spam

    RE: JetBlue, TSA Workers Pay $240,000 to Settle T-Shirt Lawsuit

    Go Jet Blue! I know I'll be looking for Jet Blue flights from now on. I think TSA didn't go far enough with this guy. He should have been detained and turned over to the FBI for questioning and possible deportation, as he is not a U.S. citizen. At a minimum, he was obviously trying to incite a confrontation. I don't see any difference in this and a verbal confrontation for which he would certainly have been removed.

  •  
    7

    barbara e hernandez

    01/08/09 | Report as spam

    RE: JetBlue, TSA Workers Pay $240,000 to Settle T-Shirt Lawsuit

    Wow, from these posts, it's easy to see why some passengers might have complained about his shirt. I think it illustrates my point above -- sometimes it's not about security, but xenophobia and prejudice.

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