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Pilot who ranted and raved mid-flight about a terrorist attack blames airline for allowing him to fly

One week ago today, a Germanwings plane carrying 150 people crashed and killed everyone on board. Since then, there is mounting evidence that the co-pilot, who was in great physical shape, was also suffering from mental illness which caused him to deliberately steer Flight 9525 into the French Alps.

Why didn’t Germanwings taken preventative steps? Apparently, the co-pilot hid his mental illness from his employer.

Three days after the Germanwings catastrophe, a former JetBlue airline pilot, who was locked out of the cockpit and had to be subdued by passengers, filed this lawsuit in federal court against his former employer.  He claims that the airline was negligent because it knew or should have known that he was “physically and mentally unfit to fly.”

How could the airline have known?

In his complaint, the plaintiff cites his “disheveled” appearance, inefficiency in performing preflight checks, and overall “disoriented” demeanor as evidence which “clearly demonstrated that something was wrong and that he was not fit to fly.”

Nonetheless, he was permitted to fly.

Once in flight, the plaintiff avers that he “began to rant and rave about the likelihood of a terrorist attack, various imagined dangers, and the need for Flight 191’s crew and passengers to embrace religion.”

The plaintiff was subsequently charged with federal crimes, punishable by up to 20 years imprisonment. (A federal judge in Texas later found him not guilty by reason of insanity). He also had to forfeit his pilot’s medical certificate, without which he can no longer fly commercially.

Was the airline negligent?

The plaintiff now claims that JetBlue unnecessarily endangered the lives of the plaintiff, the crew, and the 135 passengers. Further, he alleges that JetBlue breached a contractual obligation to him and was otherwise negligent for four reasons:

(a) failure to establish appropriate safety protocols designed to ensure its crewmembers are fit to fly; (b) failure to ensure that [the plaintiff] was fit to fly on March 27, 2012; (c) failure to replace [the plaintiff] prior to Flight 191’s departure from the gate and ensuing takeoff after he proved unfit to fly; and (d) failure to land Flight 191 promptly after [the plaintiff] proved a danger to himself and others.

This all begs the question: what obligation does an employer have to protect the workplace from those who are unfit to work? Employers have a basic duty to act reasonably to avoid foreseeable risks of harm to employees, customers, and the public. If an employee engages in harmful misconduct on the job, and the employer has not exercised such care in selecting the employee, the employer may be subject to liability for negligent hiring.

Indeed, a few years ago, several JetBlue passengers sued the airline for negligence.

But, did JetBlue have to protect the plaintiff from…himself?!? I’ll admit that’s a question I have yet to encounter. My best is guess is no. Either way, I eagerly await the outcome of this case.

Image Credit: DONALDderosa at en.wikipedia [CC BY-SA 3.0], from Wikimedia Commons