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Democracy Dies in Darkness

His unruly behavior forced a plane to divert. Now he has to pay for fuel.

The 33-year-old Australian owes his airline nearly $5,800.

4 min
(The Washington Post illustration; iStock)

In the latest move to rein in disruptive passengers, a 33-year-old Australian man will have to pay a hefty fine after his bad behavior during a flight forced a plane to dump fuel and return to the airport last year.

Australian Federal Police announced the penalty as well as the man’s guilty plea this week. He was slapped with a fine of about $6,000 by Perth Magistrates Court and told to pay the airline roughly $5,800 for fuel.

Police said in a statement that the incident dates back to September 2023, when the man was flying from Perth to Sydney. His actions — which authorities did not describe — forced the pilots to turn back to Perth. That pushed the pilots to dump fuel before landing and the airline to cancel the flight.

At the time, the passenger was charged with disorderly behavior on an aircraft and failure to comply with safety instruction. He pleaded guilty to both last week.

The agency did not identify the man or the airline, but Australian news outlets have reported since last year that the incident occurred on a Jetstar flight. The low-cost carrier is a subsidiary of Qantas. In a news story, WAtoday reported that the man was accused of being “intoxicated and disruptive” and that he locked himself in a toilet until the plane landed.

“Sorry, guys!” he said in a message to fellow passengers when confronted by TV news reporters last year. During the interview with outlets including 9News, he flexed a biceps muscle and said of “course” he would plead guilty because he wouldn’t face prison for the charges.

“All it is is just a fine,” he said, laughing.

In a statement this week, Australian Federal Police Superintendent Shona Davis was not treating the incident as a laughing matter.

“This incident should serve as a warning that criminal behaviour on board can come at a heavy cost to the offender,” she said. “It’s far simpler to obey the directions of airline staff than cause unnecessary issues, which can end up hitting you in the hip pocket.”

Airlines have gone after passengers for the costs racked up by their behavior in the past. In 2019, a British-based carrier said it had billed a passenger the equivalent of $106,000 for actions including trying to open plane doors during a flight.

At the time, aviation attorney Jol Silversmith told The Washington Post that he had seen “carriers becoming more aggressive with passengers who they believe have broken the rules.”

Even back in 2019, the International Air Transport Association called disruptive passengers “a significant problem,” with one incident for every 1,053 flights reported in 2017. Incidents spiked in the United States in 2021, soaring nearly 500 percent compared with the previous year — from about 1,000 to nearly 6,000 — as travelers clashed with flight crews over mask mandates and other issues.

Numbers have dropped in the years since, but the Federal Aviation Administration has still received nearly 900 reports of unruly passenger behavior so far this year — more than were reported in all of 2018. Globally, the International Air Transport Association said incidents actually increased after 2021.

According to the trade group, there was one unruly incident reported for every 568 flights in 2022, an increase from one per 835 flights in 2021 — and a significant jump from 2017 numbers.

Conrad Clifford, IATA’s deputy director general at the time, said in a 2023 news release that the trend was “worrying.”

“No one wants to stop people having a good time when they go on holiday — but we all have a responsibility to behave with respect for other passengers and the crew,” said Clifford, who retired last year. “For the sake of the majority, we make no apology for seeking to crack down on the bad behavior of a tiny number of travelers who can make a flight very uncomfortable for everyone else.”

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