Six Muslim imams ordered off a US Airways flight at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport last November have filed a discrimination lawsuit against the airline and the Metropolitan Airports Commission, claiming they were removed from the plane because of their race and religion.
In a 38-page document filed Monday in U.S. District Court in Minneapolis, the plaintiffs said they were "horrified and humiliated" after police removed them, under pilot's orders, from the plane in front of dozens of other passengers Nov. 20 "as if they were criminals."
Andrea Rader, a spokeswoman for US Airways, based in Tempe, Ariz., said Monday that the company hadn't seen the suit and couldn't comment on it. Nevertheless, she defended the actions the airline took that day after several passengers and flight attendants became alarmed by the imams' behavior.
"This was an unfortunate incident," Rader said. "But we do not discriminate against our customers or anyone else. The actions we took and the police took and the FBI took, they took based on behaviors that were observed. And they believed that was in the best interests of the safety of that flight. And we absolutely back those judgments."
Patrick Hogan, a spokesman for the Airports Commission, also hadn't seen the lawsuit, but said, "We believe airport police officers acted appropriately in responding to US Airways' call for assistance."
Airline officials have said the men were removed from the plane because of concerns about their loud praying, repeated use of the word "Allah," seat switching, and several requests for seat belt extenders.
Over the next five hours the men were detained and questioned by federal law enforcement officials. The imams denied that they did or said anything that could be considered threatening, and were later released without charges.
Within days, however, the incident set off a nationwide uproar.