
Did United Airlines Pilot Attack Flyer For Too Much Time In The Loo?
Small space: inside the airplane toilet. In January 2025, a passenger suffering constipation was ... More allegedly pulled out of such a lavatory naked after the pilot broke the lock on a United flight from Mexico to Houston.
United Airlines has been accused of a significant violation of passenger privacy. And the alleged antisemitism of an unnamed pilot is part of the ugly story, which United refused to discuss with us.
A young Orthodox Jewish man, Yisroel Liebb, 20, was traveling on a United flight from Tulum, Mexico to Houston Bush Intercontinental Airport. Suffering from constipation, Liebb spent 30 minutes in the aircraft lavatory—until the pilot allegedly broke down the door.
Liebb says in a recently filed lawsuit that the pilot then pulled him out with his pants around his ankles, exposing his nakedness to passengers and crew. Meanwhile, the pilot launched an antisemitic tirade about 'how Jews act.'
Liebb and an acquaintance, Jacob Sebbag, were flying to Houston on United Airlines flight 1601. Both men were wearing traditional Orthodox Jewish garb.
During the flight, Liebb left his seat to use the restroom. After 20 minutes, a flight attendant woke up Sebbag and insisted he check on Liebb, who still hadn't returned to his seat. Sebbag spoke to Liebb through the bathroom door. Liebb said he was fine but experiencing constipation, according to the complaint filed in the Southern District of New York.
After another 10 minutes, Sebbag was approached by the flight's pilot, who asked him to check on Liebb again. According to the complaint, the pilot began shouting at Liebb through the lavatory door. He then turned to Sebbag and 'began loudly demanding he force Liebb out of the bathroom.'
An United Airlines plane sits at the gate at Cancun International Airport (CUN) on May 26, 2023. ... More (Photo by Daniel SLIM / AFP) (Photo by DANIEL SLIM/AFP via Getty Images)
Liebb spoke through the door, notifying the pilot that he was okay, that he was finishing up, and that he would be out momentarily. The lawsuit claims that the pilot became visibly enraged, broke the lock on the door and forced it open, pulling Liebb out of the bathroom with his pants still around his ankles. This inadvertently exposed his genitalia to Sebbag, several flight attendants, and nearby passengers. Liebb quickly pulled his pants back to his waist after being allowed to get back on his feet.
The pilot then allegedly proceeded to repeatedly push Liebb and Sebbag back to their seats while 'making threats of getting the Plaintiffs arrested.' The pilot allegedly made 'scathing remarks about their Judaism and how 'Jews act.''
When the flight laned at 5:53PM CST, Liebb and Sebbag were in fact arrested by 'five to seven agents" from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) or Customs and Border Protection, (CBP) who pulled Liebb from his seat, bent his arms behind his back and cuffed him. Sebbag and Liebb were marched off the plane and confined in separate cells, handcuffed to tables. The lawsuit claims that their 'persons and luggage were subjected to intrusive, unconsented, unwarranted and unreasonable searches.'
Paragraph 28 of the lawsuit is particularly chilling. 'An employee of Defendant United Airlines [allegedly the pilot of the aircraft] knowingly and intentionally caused physical contact with, and harm to, the persons of the Plaintiffs by pulling Liebb out of the bathroom by force and shoving the Plaintiffs through the aisle while shouting about his hatred for them because of their religious beliefs.'
Among the charges raised in the civil lawsuit are 'unlawful detention and search' resulting in 'bodily injuries and emotional distress.' Liebb and Sebbag said they suffered severe wrist pain from the handcuffs for several days following, while Liebb said his head and legs were also injured.
The men also missed their connecting flight to New York and had to stay over in Houston. United Airlines gave them complimentary flights for the following day, although they had to pay for their hotel rooms and food.
The George Bush International Airport in Houston, TX where the two passengers were detained after ... More the incident on United Flight 1601.
Obviously, the allegations raised by the attack by the unnamed United Captain, the invasion of passenger privacy and of antisemitic taunting are extremely serious.
We contacted United Airlines for more information about what happened. We were told only, 'We don't have anything to share on this.'
This has not been a good week for United, which was also accused of trying to shut off the ventilator of a sick one-year-old child. The child's mother, New Jersey resident Melissa Sotomayor, was reportedly told that her disabled son who relies on a tracheostomy, ventilator, and portable oxygen concentrator, 'would be fine' once the flight reached a high altitude.
And unfortunately, the alleged antisemitic incident on United Flight 1601 is not the first time a major airline has been accused of such behavior. A 2022 incident involving the German airline Lufthansa resulted in the largest fine the U.S. Department of Transporation (DOT) has ever levied for a civil rights violation.
In the 2022 incident, Lufthansa refused boarding to 128 Orthodox Jews who were wearing traditional garb. The Lufthansa passengers had flown to Frankfurt from New York. They had tickets on Lufthansa to travel to Budapest . The men, many traveling separately, were on a religious pilgrimage to a Hungarian town formerly known as Kerestir.
But instead of dealing with a couple of individuals who refused to comply with the mask mandate, Lufthansa denied boarding to more than one hundred passengers because they were 'visibly Jewish.'
This photo taken on March 10, 2025 shows the Lufthansa service desk at the Frankfurt Airport in ... More Frankfurt, Germany. Over 100 Orthodox Jews flying from New York to Budapest were denied boarding in 2022 in what the U.S. Department of Transportation determined was a civil rights violation. (Photo by Zhang Fan/Xinhua via Getty Images)
Although many did not know each other and were not traveling together, the men told investigators that Lufthansa treated them as if they were a group. They denied boarding to all over alleged misbehavior by a few passengers.
Eventually a phone video emerged, with a Lufthansa supervisor saying to a Jewish passenger that those who were banned are 'Jewish from JFK.' The supervisor was recorded saying 'It's Jewish people who were the mess, who made the problems, everyone has to pay for a couple.'
In October of 2024, the U.S. Department of Transportation fined Lufthansa $4 million for its treatment of the passengers, the largest fine the agency has issued against an airline for civil-rights violations. The department said most of the 128 passengers who were denied boarding 'wore distinctive garb typically worn by Orthodox Jewish men,' as did Liebb and Sebbag in the United case.
In the aftermath of the incident on Flight 1601, Liebb and Sebbag reportedly believe that the United Airlines pilot deliberately shared misinformation with the Department of Homeland Security, Customs and Border Protection, and the Transportation Safety Administration. The men believe that the pilot's 'tip' led to them to be unlawfully detained and searched.
Lufthansa reached a settlement with most of the affected passengers in 2022. Whether that will ultimately happen in the Flight 1601 case, where Liebb and Sebbag are seeking damages for emotional distress, and the costs of their legal fees, is unclear.
But financial damages alone do not erase the lingering pain of discrimination and embarrassment at the loss of privacy. United needs to do a full and transparent investigation into what occurred, particularly if the actions of the pilot were as inappropriate as described.
Global antisemitism has surged 340% in the last two years. It is dismaying that it appears to have spread to the 'friendly skies' as well.
Stock image of mature man having nausea on a plane.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
Supporters of deported Venezuelans denied visit to Salvadoran jail
Supporters of Venezuelans deported by the United States to El Salvador said Friday they had been refused permission to see the migrants in prison. The spurned group included the first family member of a detainee to come to the Central American nation in hopes of establishing contact with them. More than 250 Venezuelans were expelled by the United States to El Salvador in March after being accused of being members of the Tren de Aragua criminal gang. "I came with great hope," Jhoanna Sanguino, the aunt of 24-year-old Widmer Agelvis Sanguino, told AFP shortly before leaving El Salvador. "I promised my sister that her boy would soon be free, and I promised many mothers. I don't want them to lose faith. We were so close, yet so far away," she said. Sanguino was accompanied by Reina Cardenas, a friend of deportee Andry Hernandez Romero, and activists from the Amparo Foundation, a human rights NGO providing legal support to some of the Venezuelans. They said their request to visit the migrants in the high-security CECOT prison built by President Nayib Bukele to house gang members was unsuccessful. US President Donald Trump invoked rarely used wartime laws to fly many of the migrants to El Salvador without holding any court hearings. His administration struck a deal to pay the government of ally Bukele millions of dollars to hold the deportees in prison. "There are 252 Venezuelans whose families are crying and fighting for them," said Sanguino. Relatives are waiting in Venezuela for "some contact, by phone or a letter, some proof of life," she said. A law firm hired by Caracas to represent some of the other detained Venezuelans also says that it has been denied access. mis/fj/dr/acb
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
Deadly school shooting fuels debate on Austria's gun laws
With Austria still reeling from this week's deadly school shooting that killed 10 people, a debate is now raging over the Alpine country's gun laws. The unprecedented case of deadly gun violence stunned the country of almost 9.2 million people, which ranks among the 10 safest in the world, according to the Global Peace Index. While politicians have called for tighter restrictions on private gun ownership in the wake of the shooting in Graz, interest in firearms and demand for weapons training courses has surged. "You can't imagine how many people have signed up for shooting courses" since Tuesday's attack, Viennese gun dealer Markus Schwaiger, who also offers training courses at shooting ranges, told AFP. "People are worried that gun laws are about to get tightened" in the coming months, he added. Austria has a relatively high number of weapons in circulation, with more than 1.5 million registered to about 370,000 owners. - 'Strong gun culture' - According to industry expert Aaron Karp, Austria has a "strong gun culture" centred around "hunting and sports shooting, especially in the countryside", which is rich with game. The Alpine nation is also one of the European countries with the largest number of small arms in circulation per capita, said Karp, one of the authors of the Small Arms Survey, which compiles data on gun ownership. Famous for the Glock pistol, invented by Austrian engineer Gaston Glock, gun ownership is deeply rooted in the country -- and has been on a steady rise in recent decades: only about 900,000 weapons were registered in Austria in 2015, according to official figures. For Schwaiger, "rising populism" has also played its part, with right-wing politicians tapping into people's anxieties over crises, arguing that the world has become a more dangerous place. "For twenty years, right-wing populism has been scaring people" and "every crisis causes sales to skyrocket," he told AFP. The shooting at a secondary school in the southern city of Graz by a 21-year-old former pupil was the deadliest postwar mass shooting in Austria. But a study published online in 2020 in the European Psychiatry journal suggests that the number of violent deaths in Austria has been increasing in lockstep with the number of weapons. In order to join the European Union in 1995, Austria had to regulate the sale of firearms, which temporarily led to a drop in violent deaths -- until the financial crisis of 2008 hit. According to the study, the positive effect of the reform has been "offset by the global economic slowdown", which increased anxiety among the public and thus the tendency to purchase weapons. "After such an act of madness... there must be consequences and changes," Interior Minister Gerhard Karner said on Friday. Under the current legislation, anyone without a criminal record and over the age of 21 can buy handguns after undergoing an assessment and registering their weapon. - 'Unfit' - "The standards for psychological testing" to grant gun licences in Austria are "very good", said Karp, but proper implementation appears to be the bottleneck. The gunman, who killed nine pupils and a teacher in Graz, was rejected from Austria's mandatory military service after failing the psychological tests and being deemed "unfit". He was nonetheless able to receive a gun licence and purchase the shotgun and pistol that he used in the attack. "He obviously found a gun dealer and a psychologist who didn't look too closely," Schwaiger lamented. "There is still too much leeway." Such shortcomings have been dominating and fuelling the most recent debate on Austria's gun laws, with the opposition Green Party tabling a bill to tighten legislation in May. Austrian authorities have said they plan to consult other European countries like France, Sweden and the Czech Republic, which have experienced mass shootings in the past. "But there are cultural differences and each country must chart its own course," Karp said. bg/kym/bc
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
Second officer arrested over Kenya custody death
A second officer has been arrested in connection with the death of a teacher in custody in the Kenyan capital Nairobi, the police watchdog said Friday, a case that has sparked nationwide outrage. Albert Ojwang, 31, died in custody last weekend after being arrested for criticising a senior officer online. Police initially said Ojwang had fatally injured himself by banging his head against a wall, but a government pathologist later found the wounds were "unlikely to be self-inflicted". His death has reignited anger over a wave of abductions and heavy-handed policing during anti-government protests last year. Protesters marched on parliament on Thursday, some throwing stones and police firing tear gas. The Independent Policing Oversight Authority (IPOA) watchdog said in a statement that Samson Talaam, the head of the central Nairobi police station where the incident occurred, had been arrested along with an unnamed civilian. A police official confirmed to AFP that Talaam had been arrested in the western city of Eldoret. Another officer from the same Nairobi station, Constable James Mukhwana, appeared in court earlier in a case under the charge of the IPOA. The watchdog asked for three weeks to complete its investigation, telling the court Mukhwana was present on the night Ojwang was processed by officers. Earlier in the week, police spokesman Michael Muchiri said five officers had been removed from active duty, to "allow for transparent investigations". President William Ruto has called for a swift investigation, and promised on Friday that the government would "protect citizens from rogue police officers". The IPOA recently reported 18 people had died in police custody in the past four months. Protesters have called for the resignation of Deputy Inspector-General Eliud Kipkoech Lagat -- the officer Ojwang was accused of criticising. Rights groups say dozens of people were illegally detained in the aftermath of last year's rallies, with many still missing, and others have been arrested for criticism of Ruto and the government. str-srg/jxb