Three Black men have filed a lawsuit against American Airlines, alleging racial discrimination following their removal from a flight due to a complaint about body odor. The incident occurred on January 5th on a flight from Phoenix, Arizona, to New York.
The plaintiffs, Alvin Jackson, Emmanuel Jean Joseph, and Xavier Veal, claimed that although they were not seated together and did not know each other, every Black man on the flight was removed. In a joint statement, the men said, “American Airlines singled us out for being Black, embarrassed us, and humiliated us.”
The Texas-based airline stated it was investigating the matter, emphasizing that the allegations did not align with its values. According to a federal lawsuit filed by the consumer advocacy group Public Citizen, the men had already taken their seats and were preparing to depart Phoenix when a flight attendant approached each of them and asked them to exit the plane.
Jackson, Joseph, and Veal stated that upon leaving, they realized that “every Black man on the flight was being removed.” They noted that each of them had flown from Los Angeles earlier that day without any issues. At the flight gate, an airline agent informed the men, along with five others, that they had been removed due to a white male flight attendant’s complaint about an unidentified passenger’s body odor.
“There is no explanation other than the color of our skin,” the men stated, asserting that the incident was clearly an act of racial discrimination. While American Airlines employees attempted to re-book the men on other flights, there were no available services to New York that night. Eventually, the group was allowed to re-take their seats on the original flight.
American Airlines issued a statement saying, “We take all claims of discrimination very seriously and want our customers to have a positive experience when they choose to fly with us. Our teams are currently investigating the matter, as the claims do not reflect our core values or our purpose of caring for people.”
The lawsuit also detailed that while the men waited outside the plane, the pilot announced a delay due to an issue with “body odor,” which the plaintiffs claimed was false. The suit describes the emotional toll of the incident: “Throughout the flight – from the moment of their reboarding, in each interaction with the white male flight attendant, and continuing until landing – Plaintiffs experienced profound feelings of embarrassment, humiliation, anxiety, anger, and distress. The act of returning to their seats after the unwarranted delay, navigating past the predominantly white passengers, several of whom eyed them with anger and undue suspicion, compounded their humiliation.”
The lawsuit demands that the airline pay unspecified damages for the “trauma” the men endured. One of the plaintiffs, Joseph, told the BBC that the “alienating” experience reminded him of Civil Rights hero Rosa Parks being forced to move to the back of an Alabama bus in 1955. “It’s a strange, crazy story that in 2024 we are still going through stuff like this,” Joseph said, adding that the lawsuit is necessary to ensure American Airlines does not receive merely a “slap on the wrist.”
In 2017, the NAACP issued a travel advisory urging Black Americans to avoid American Airlines due to reported discrimination. This advisory was lifted the following year after the airline announced operational changes.