Lifestyle

FBI tells women how to protect themselves from sexual assaults on flights

The #MeToo movement has reached 35,000 feet.

Several years ago, when she was traveling as a passenger on a flight, Sara Nelson woke up to an assault: Her inebriated seatmate, a man she didn’t know, was groping her breasts and her crotch.

As a trained flight attendant, Nelson thought she would know what to do. But she found herself frozen, scared to call for help and risk potentially escalating the attack or — worse — that she wouldn’t be believed.

“It was confusing and mortifying,” said Nelson, now the international president of the Association of Flight Attendants, a union representing 50,000 workers. “From a personal experience, I can understand what it’s like for a victim to go through all of that and wonder if you should report it, or if someone will believe you and care.”

One in five flight attendants has witnessed a passenger being assaulted or had an assault reported to them, according to a 2017 survey of nearly 2,000 flight attendants. However, the vast majority of flight attendants have no specific training regarding sexual assault, the survey found. The issue has been brought into focus by #MeToo, the movement highlighting women’s experiences with sexual assault and harassment across different industries.

In addition to passengers’ own stories about sexual assault on planes, most flight attendants say they’ve been harassed on the job, a May 2018 survey by AFA found. “Now, there is political and societal momentum to take this seriously,” Nelson said. “The men — and it’s mostly men — who run the airline industry would be shocked to know what is happening on their planes.”

Recent high-profile cases have called attention to the issue. Randi Zuckerberg, sister of Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg, reported being harassed on an Alaska Airlines flight in November.

In a Facebook post, she said flight attendants asked her if she would like to move seats and reportedly asked the passenger, “Are you behaving today?” Zuckerberg said she then realized, “Why should I have to move? I am the one being sexually harassed!” (The company pledged to “fully investigate” the incident and two executives spoke personally to Zuckerberg.)

In March, a Delta Airlines passenger sued the airline for allegedly failing to properly address an onboard sexual assault, San Francisco’s ABC News 7 reported. A Delta spokesperson told ABC News 7 the company couldn’t comment on the lawsuit, but was “disheartened” by the incident. “We take all accounts of sexual assault very seriously and conduct routine reviews of our processes to ensure the safety and security of our customers remains a top priority,” Delta told the news station.

“The attacks generally occur on long-haul flights when the cabin is dark,” according to a blog post published in April on the Federal Bureau of Investigation official website. “The victims are usually in middle or window seats, sleeping and covered with a blanket or jacket. They report waking up to their seatmate’s hands inside their clothing or underwear.”

The FBI has advice to help protect yourself while flying

“If alerted in advance, FBI agents can be on hand when the plane lands to conduct interviews and take subjects into custody,” the April 2018 FBI blog notes. “FBI victim specialists can respond as well, because victims of federal crimes are entitled by law to a variety of services.”

The agency has advice for anyone experiencing sexual assault in an airplane:

  • “Recognize that mixing alcohol with sleeping pills or other medication on an overnight flight increases your risk.”
  • “Trust your gut. Offenders will often test their victims, sometimes pretending to brush against them to see how they react or if they wake up.”
  • “If your seatmate is a stranger, no matter how polite he or she may seem, keep the armrest between you down.”
  • “If you are arranging for a child to fly unaccompanied, try to reserve an aisle seat so flight attendants can keep a closer watch on them.”
  • “If an incident happens, report it immediately to the flight crew and ask that they record the attacker’s identity and report the incident.”

In response to complaints about onboard assaults and harassment, Rep. Peter DeFazio, a Democrat from Oregon, introduced the Stop Sexual Assault and Harassment in Transportation Act in Congress earlier this month. If passed, the bill would require clear policies and procedures regarding sexual assault on airlines.

The act would increase the penalty for interfering with crew members to $35,000, direct the Department of Transportation to collect data annually on sexual assault and require airlines to display signage on planes describing their sexual assault policies.

“We need to make it clear this is a disgusting act and we will have zero tolerance as an airline for it,” Nelson said. “The more we talk about this, the safer everyone is going to be.”

A majority of flight attendants say they’re harassed on the job

Sexual assault and harassment also impacts people who work on planes. Some 68 percent of flight attendants say they have experienced sexual harassment during their careers, according to a May 2018 survey of more than 3,500 flight attendants from 29 airlines conducted by the Association of Flight Attendants.

Of those, 18 percent said they were the targets of sexual assault, including groping and unwanted kisses from passengers. Only 7 percent of flight attendants who experienced abuse reported it to their employers.

Meg, a flight attendant based in Los Angeles who works for a major US airline, said she has been the target of countless incidents of harassment over her career, including a man cornering her in the galley and demanding to see her breasts or other men grabbing her inappropriately. She said she never reported any of the incidents because she didn’t think her company would take it seriously.

“We never had the tools to deal with situations like these, so I have always just brushed it off,” she said. “Now with the #MeToo movement, our company is addressing it. I guess a bunch of famous people have to say something for people to care.”

Several airlines have publicly clarified their harassment policies as coverage of the issue has intensified. United Airlines CEO Oscar Munoz said in December the company has “zero tolerance” for sexual harassment of either flight attendants of passengers.

A history of sexualizing flight attendants in popular culture has fueled persistent sexism in the industry, Nelson said. Ads put an emphasis on what employees are wearing and tempted passengers with lines such as “I’m Cheryl. Fly me.” A 1960s-era joke featuring a stewardess saying “Coffee, tea or me?” — borrowed from an apocryphal flight attendant memoir — captured the attitude that flight attendants existed for (male) customers’ pleasure.

“Time is up for the industry to put an end to its sexist past,” she said.

Reporting assaults takes several steps

“Sexual assault aboard aircraft — which usually takes the form of unwanted touching — is a felony that can land offenders in prison,” according to the FBI’s April 2018 report. Disobeying an aircraft crew is a federal offense and perpetrators can face up to 20 years in prison for interfering with flight crew, depending on the charge.

And yet it’s a particularly fraught issue on planes, said Paul Hudson, president of FlyersRights.org, a consumer advocacy group. “There are some unique issues when assault happens on a plane,” he said. “You are in a confined space and can’t get away.”

The crimes are also complicated by the fact that victims have to take several steps to report them — more than they would if the assault happened on the ground, Hudson added.

If a passenger is assaulted on a plane, he or she is supposed to report the incident to a flight attendant, who will then alert the captain. The captain then has to tell a flight dispatcher on the ground, who then contacts law enforcement, Hudson said. FlyersRights.org has sent a number of letters to the Department of Justice lobbying for a means to shorten this chain of communication, Hudson said.

“If an ordinary crime required victims to go through three or four steps to get to police rather than just calling 911, a lot of crimes would go unreported — especially if part of that chain had a commercial interest in not reporting crime,” he said.

The Association of Flight Attendants is also lobbying for more clear guidance on reporting these incidents and a streamlined reporting process to cut down the response time.

Some 38 cases of in-flight sexual assault were reported to the FBI during the 2014 fiscal year, according to an FBI blog in April 2018. In the last fiscal year, that rose to 63 reported cases. But FBI special agent David Gates, who is based at Los Angeles International Airport and regularly investigates such cases, says it’s likely that the number of incidents, assuming that many go unreported, are likely much higher.

The risk of onboard assaults is on the rise, flight attendants say

The risk of sexual assault in the air is on the rise, Nelson said, because airlines are shoving more passengers on increasingly crowded planes.

“When you get more people packed in closer together, there is a lower line of sight and perpetrators feel emboldened because their victim is closer to them,” Nelson said. “In an odd way, you have more privacy when nobody can see because you’re surrounded by people.”

The airline industry has slashed capacity by more than 50 percent in the last 20 years, according to data tracked by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Major carriers like American Airlines, Delta Airlines and United Airlines have shrunk passenger spaces to save on costs in recent years. Meanwhile, airlines have cut flight attendant staffing on flights.

To successfully report these crimes, airline employees need better training and a uniform way to report them, Nelson said. “We have no idea how prevalent assault is and if there isn’t a reporting procedure, people are less inclined to take it seriously,” she added.

“In a way, the perpetrators are putting themselves at risk, because they are trapped and surrounded by witnesses when they land,” Nelson said.