American Airlines Faces Federal Judge in Serious Safety Violations Case
According to a complaint filed in US District Court in Brooklyn, NY, an FAA inspector who was traveling as a passenger on an American Airlines flight between Orlando International Airport in Florida, and LaGuardia Airport in New York, observed fuel leaking from the wing of the aircraft, a McDonnell Douglas MD-82 passenger jet, during the flight. The inspector reported his observation to the flight crew, and pointed out the location of the leak to the pilot of the aircraft following its arrival in New York. Despite the inspector's warning, American Airlines allegedly took no action to adequately inspect, repair, or maintain the aircraft and correct the leak -- rendering the aircraft un-airworthy -- and failed even to note the Inspector's report of a leak in the maintenance logs as required by FAA regulations.
Instead, American Airlines chose to fly the plane on an additional 53 commercial flights, deferring appropriate action until the plane underwent a regularly scheduled intensive maintenance check. In the course of that maintenance check, the complaint alleges that a fuel leak was discovered in the same area that had been reported by the FAA Inspector weeks earlier.
The government alleges that on 53 commercial flights American Airlines failed to comply with FAA regulations which prohibit the operation of an aircraft in an un-airworthy condition, that its operation of those flights was in a careless or reckless manner so as to endanger the lives and property of others, and that American Airlines violated multiple FAA regulations governing maintenance and record-keeping with respect to the leak.
Accordingly, the US government seeks more than $1 million in civil penalties and sufficient oversight to assure that American Airlines complies with the applicable standards of safety, maintenance, and record keeping.
"These violations reflect a disregard for the safety of passengers and the regulations that exist to safeguard our skies," stated United States Attorney Roselyn Mauskopf. "Betrayal of the public trust vested in air carriers licensed by the FAA will be answered by vigorous enforcement of our laws."
Sources: US Department of Justice, Federal Aviation Administration, American Society for Industrial Security