The incident occurred on April 23, but footage of the ordeal was just posted to YouTube on May 3 by Brian Schear, the customer who can be seen arguing with a flight attendant during an eight . "What are we supposed to do when we get off this plane?" A voice is heard telling Schear that refusal to disembark would be "a federal offense" and that "you and your wife would go to jail.". Brian then said, Then they can remove me off the plane," the video shows. The incident has brought up several questions about aviation rules, from Delta's widely shared airline policy that children who are at least 2 years old must have their own paid seats to the Federal Aviation Administration's recommendation of car seats for kids who weigh between 22 and 44 pounds a range that includes most 2-year-olds. brian purvis (@brianpurvis1) May 4, 2017. Schears wife, Brittany, shared the video on her Facebook page on Wednesday. Since 2014, hes been president of ConditionReports.com in Orange County, California. The plane was overbooked, and, since, the original named passenger, the older child, wasnt in the seat, Delta wanted to use it for someone else. Delta apologizes after California family booted from flight, threatened BBB File Opened: 8/23/2007. Not his job to decide who gets the seat. Another facet of the dispute is that the Federal Aviation Administration strongly urges that infants travel in a car seat for safety, although children up to age 2 can be held in a parents lap. @b_king21 wrote: "@Delta u can use a car seat. "It's out of my hands now," the airline employee later tells Schear. Delta Air Lines said in a statement it was "sorry for the unfortunate experience," a day after Brian and Brittany Schear posted a video online showing them being told to leave a flight or be. The rhetoric during the incident escalated to the point the Schears were told their children could end up in foster care.
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