The suit contends that racist actions by American Airlines employees led to the arrest by police of the Arizona newlyweds while on their honeymoon.
A mixed-race couple in Arizona has sued American Airlines after a flight crew allegedly called the cops over a passenger’s bizarre claim that the black husband was sex trafficking his white wife. The newlyweds were snapping smiling selfies on the September 2022 flight to their Miami honeymoon, according to CBS 5 Arizona.
A couple from Arizona is suing American Airlines for alleged racial discrimination. The lawsuit was filed after an incident that happened when the couple was traveling for their honeymoon in 2022, where the two were reportedly accused of sex trafficking.
In a lawsuit, two newlyweds say they were detained after a passenger and airline employees wrongly suspected the Black husband of trafficking his white wife.
A lawsuit has been filed against American Airlines and some of its employees accusing them of racially discriminating against some newlyweds from Arizona and falsely accusing the husband of sex ...
A couple from Arizona is suing American Airlines for alleged racial discrimination. The lawsuit was filed after an incident that happened when the couple was traveling for their honeymoon in 2022 ...
A bill in the Arizona House of Representatives will set aside sales tax funds for Chase Field renovations and secure a lease extension for the Diamondbacks.
There were 60 passengers and four crew members aboard American Airlines flight 5342, en route to Washington, D.C., from Wichita, Kan. The Bombardier CRJ700 is a small single-aisle jet that can be arranged with seating for up to 78 passengers.
An American Airlines passenger jet collided with a Black Hawk helicopter, crashing into the Potomac River in Washington D.C. on Wednesday night. This is right by the Reagan National Airport where this plane was heading.
A small aircraft crashed in the Potomac River near the vicinity of Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport on Wednesday night, authorities said.
Conservation groups say the proposed Arizona routes for an Interstate 11 project failed to consider habitat for imperiled desert species.
Phoenix resident Paul Guilbeault reunited with his dog, Damion, in January 2025 after losing him in Oklahoma City in 2017.