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JetBlue sued by passengers on flight diverted by pilot's meltdown

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A JetBlue pilot captain Clayton Osbon, is removed from the plane after erratic behavior forced the crew to land in Amarillo, Texas, March 27, 2012. REUTERS/Steve Miller/The Reporters Edge

A JetBlue pilot captain Clayton Osbon, is removed from the plane after erratic behavior forced the crew to land in Amarillo, Texas, March 27, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Steve Miller/The Reporters Edge

Wed Jun 13, 2012 1:23pm EDT

(Reuters) - A group of passengers from a JetBlue flight that was forced to make an emergency landing in March after the pilot suffered a midair meltdown filed a lawsuit on Wednesday against both the airline and the pilot, according to court papers.

The suit, filed by 10 passengers of JetBlue flight 191, accuses the airline of failing to properly supervise the pilot, Clayton Osbon.

JetBlue "was grossly negligent in retaining defendant Osbon, whom JetBlue knew or should have known was unfit to be entrusted with the aircraft as pilot," the court papers said.

The suit, which was filed in New York State Supreme Court in the Queens borough of New York City, seeks unspecified compensatory and punitive damages.

Osbon, 49, who lives near Savannah, Georgia, has been charged by federal authorities with interfering in the operations of a flight crew on the March 27 flight from New York to Las Vegas, which was forced to land in Amarillo, Texas.

Osbon's lawyer, Dean Roper of Amarillo, has said his client will plead insanity.

A federal indictment against Osbon described a harrowing flight during which Osbon had to be subdued and forcibly restrained.

The FBI says that while he was at the controls of the Airbus A320 about halfway into the five-hour flight, Osbon said, "Things just don't matter," and told the flight's first officer, "We're not going to Vegas."

The pilot suddenly left the cockpit and started running up and down the aisle, banging on a restroom door, and attempted to force his way back into the cockpit, which by then had been locked by the co-pilot, First Officer Jason Dowd.

Several passengers restrained Osbon while Dowd safely landed the plane.

The FBI says that while he was being restrained, Osbon yelled, "Pray now for Jesus Christ," started yelling about Iraq, Iran and terrorists, and shouted at one point toward the cockpit: "Guys, push it to full throttle!"

JetBlue has not yet reviewed the suit and has a policy against commenting on pending litigation, company spokeswoman Alison Croyle said.

Osbon's attorney, Roper, was not immediately available to comment.

(Reporting by Dan Burns; Editing by Eric Beech)

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Comments (4)
FatGatorSings wrote:
A person has no control over a mental health crisis and it can happen to anyone. Family and friends may not even be aware it’s pending. For the most part people are very ignorant of mental health matters and how to apply mental health first aid. People are extremely greedy and many are always looking to sue for profit. It isn’t helping the state of this country when people do this for a reason that people have no control over.

Jun 13, 2012 1:39pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
GHM wrote:
One of the ten passengers must be a lawyer.
I bet they sat in first class.

Jun 13, 2012 2:03pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
Choonzer wrote:
Agreed fatgator, psychological breakdowns such as these often happen with little warning. I agree that if JetBlue was aware of the condition (which I highly doubt), they were negligent. But the “should have known” piece is bogus. I’m sorry the passengers were frightened, but stuff happens. This is a totally frivolous and opportunistic lawsuit, which explains why only 10 of the passengers are doing it.

Jun 13, 2012 2:55pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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