45°F
weather icon Clear

United apologizes for giving away toddler’s paid-for seat

HONOLULU — United Airlines has apologized to a Hawaii teacher who was forced to hold her 2-year-old son on her lap for three-and-a-half hours after an employee gave the toddler’s purchased seat to a standby passenger.

Hawaii News Now reports that Shirley Yamauchi says she paid almost $1,000 each for two tickets because children over the age of 2 are required to have their own seat.

She boarded the plane in Houston with her son, Taizo, and they took their seats for the flight to Boston.

The Kapolei Middle School teacher says a flight attendant came to check if Taizo was present before a standby passenger showed up with a ticket with the toddler’s seat number.

Yamauchi says she told a flight attendant about the problem, but the woman just shrugged, said the flight was full, and walked away.

The company issued an apology five days after the incident.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
MORE STORIES
THE LATEST
Invest in US or face tariffs, Trump tells Davos elite

Davos founder Klaus Schwab told the new president that his return and his agenda have “been at the focus of our discussions this week.”

Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire set to be extended beyond next week

The Israeli military said Wednesday its soldiers killed a terrorist in Gaza who it said posed a threat to its forces, as the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas stretched into a fourth day.

House OKs immigrant detention bill that would be Trump’s first to sign

Immigration policy has often been one of the most entrenched issues in Congress, but a crucial faction of politically vulnerable Democrats joined with Republicans to lift the strict proposal to passage on a 263-156 vote tally.

DOJ directs prosecutors to probe local efforts to obstruct immigration enforcement

The memo, from acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove, signals a sharp turnabout in priorities from President Joe Biden’s administration, with the DOJ’s civil division told to identify state and local laws and policies that “threaten to impede” the Trump administration’s immigration efforts and potentially challenge them in court.