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Social media furore over violent removal of doctor from United Airlines plane

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Dr David Dao, is pictured bleeding from the mouth after he was body slammed by cops (left) and him being removed from a United Airlines flight in Chicago (right)

Dr David Dao, is pictured bleeding from the mouth after he was body slammed by cops (left) and him being removed from a United Airlines flight in Chicago (right)

Chicago - As the flight waited to depart from Chicago's O'Hare Airport, officers could be seen grabbing the screaming man from a window seat.

Published: Tue 11 Apr 2017, 11:00 PM

Updated: Wed 12 Apr 2017, 1:43 AM

  • By
  • AP

Video of police officers dragging a passenger from an overbooked United Airlines flight sparked an uproar on Monday on social media, and a spokesman for the airline insisted that employees had no choice but to contact authorities to remove the man.
As the flight waited to depart from Chicago's O'Hare Airport, officers could be seen grabbing the screaming man from a window seat, pulling him across the armrest and dragging him down the aisle by his arms. United was trying to make room for four employees of a partner airline on the Sunday evening flight to Louisville, Kentucky. Other passengers on Flight 3411 are heard saying, "Please, my God," "What are you doing?" "This is wrong," "Look at what you did to him" and "Busted his lip."
Passenger Audra D. Bridges posted the video on Facebook. Her husband Tyler Bridges said United offered $400 and then $800 vouchers and a hotel stay for volunteers to give up their seats. When no one volunteered, a United manager came on the plane and announced that passengers would be chosen at random.
"We almost felt like we were being taken hostage," Tyler Bridges said. "We were stuck there. You can't do anything as a traveller. You're relying on the airline."
When airline employees named four customers who had to leave the plane, three of them did so. The fourth person refused to move, and police were called, United spokesman Charlie Hobart said. "We followed the right procedures," Hobart said in a phone interview. "That plane had to depart. We wanted to get our customers to their destinations."
Oscar Munoz, CEO of United Airlines' parent company, described the event as 'upsetting' and apologised for "having to re-accommodate these customers".



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