WAVY.com

Virginia Beach man, humiliated on Southwest flight, gets flight voucher but no ‘sorry’

VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (WAVY) — John Kerrigan, his daughter and her friend are still getting over the embarrassment they had to endure when they landed three weeks ago at Norfolk International Airport, and said that, as far as an apology, the response from Southwest Airlines fell short.

Kerrigan and the girls were on an Oct. 21 Southwest flight from Denver when the flight crew jumped to the conclusion that Kerrigan was trafficking the girls and notified Norfolk airport security. Three officers hauled Kerrigan off the plane from his back row seat before anyone else got off. He was questioned but eventually released.


A Southwest email after Kerrigan’s complaint uses phrases such as “we regret your disappointment,” but the word sorry is nowhere to be found.

“It’s kind of like a non-apology type of thank you or have a nice day type of thing,” Kerrigan said Thursday morning. “It didn’t seem to faze them too much. I guess it’s just a large corporation and they figure they’ll take a publicity hit here or there.”

Kerrigan contacted an attorney about suing Southwest, but was advised to simply accept the $1,500 flight credit Southwest is giving as compensation for his trouble.

But such a lawsuit has happened before.

Kerrigan’s case comes at a time when flight crews have human trafficking on their radar, the result of the federal Blue Lightning Initiative from the Department of Homeland Security.

A California woman traveling on Southwest with her daughter last year was also mistakenly profiled as a human trafficker. She is suing Southwest in federal court for unspecified damages.

Meanwhile, Kerrigan agrees with any effort to curb human trafficking.

“But the way they’re going to get you off the plane like that,” he said, “I think is complete BS.”