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Lawsuit claims off-duty pilot groped, kissed passenger
The plaintiff says she reported the conduct to a flight attendant who, instead of intervening, served the off-duty pilot a fifth can of wine
MINNEAPOLIS — A Twin Cities woman is suing Delta Airlines and an off-duty employee of a Delta subsidiary, claiming flight attendants overserved alcohol to the Wisconsin woman who then groped and kissed the passenger against her will.
Alison Petri says she informed a flight attendant mid-flight about the behavior, but instead of stopping it or reseating anyone, they served the person a fifth can of wine.
“You can’t leave on an airplane. So if you’re being assaulted, you really are dependent on the crew doing the right thing. And they didn’t. And then they continued to not do the right thing,” Petri said.
Petri said shortly after the woman boarded the plane, she told Petri and the other passenger next to her that she was a pilot, and she was going through a tough time. But as she began consuming alcohol on the flight, Petri said the woman grew more and more inappropriate – touching Petri and even kissing her on the mouth despite being told to stop.
Then, before deplaning – the woman groped Petri one last time, the lawsuit alleges.
“She groped my butt. I turned to her and said, ‘We are not doing that!” Petri said.
Petri immediately informed the gate agent, then reported the incident to airport police. Meanwhile, surveillance video captured the off-duty worker falling on an escalator and being physically unable to get back up without help.
The woman was initially criminally charged with 5th-degree criminal sexual conduct and disorderly conduct. A prosecutor dropped the sex charge but the woman pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct, admitting physical contact, with the agreement the case would be dropped after she serves probation.
The civil complaint now filed in federal court includes a photograph of the woman holding a vape pen. Petri said she was puffing clouds of vape into the air with a flight attendant nearby, but no one stopped her.
The civil file also includes Facebook Messenger messages between the woman and one of the flight attendants, who reached out to warn her about Petri’s complaint.
“Do u have any idea what she might have said?” the woman asked.
“You kissed her,” the flight attendant answered.
“Omg I did?” the woman asked.
“Yeah, you were pretty bombed,” the flight attendant answered.
The flight attendant later tells the woman to “stick with your story,” then tells her that when Delta questioned him, he told them that he wasn’t aware of any physical contact and did not serve her alcohol.
Petri and her attorney believe the texts are evidence that Delta employees tried to cover up the misconduct.
Since the incident, Petri said she’s suffered anxiety on flights which she often has to take because of her work around the country advocating against childhood drowning.
The lawsuit cites other instances where Delta employees allegedly over-served alcohol.
“Ms. Petri does not want to see this happen to any other person. And when you see the sheer number of other instances that this has happened in the past, this is necessary to ensure it doesn’t happen to another person,” said attorney Jeff Storms.
A Delta spokesperson said the woman no longer is employed by a Delta subsidiary.
“While we don’t have any specific comment on this pending litigation, Delta does not tolerate inappropriate or unlawful behavior. Nothing is more important than the safety of our customers and our people,” the spokesperson said in a statement.
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Woman, 4 children deported for missing immigration hearing in Houston
Federico Arellano Jr. said his children were crying as they were arrested and placed on a flight to McAllen and then escorted to Reynosa, Mexico.
HOUSTON — A Houston man is fighting back after they said Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency agents unexpectedly deported his wife and four children last week.
It happened on Wednesday, Dec. 11, according to attorneys. Federico Arellano Jr. was there when ICE took his wife and children.
Christina Salazar, 23, as well as her four children — including twins born in September — were arrested, put on a plane to McAllen and then escorted to Reynosa, Mexico.
“They were treated as if they were high-risk criminals,” a family attorney said in a news release.
According to Arellano Jr., his wife and two older children missed a hearing with a Houston immigration judge on Oct. 9, about a month after she had an emergency cesarean section to deliver her twins. She was told by doctors to recover at home.
The family said they called the immigration court to let them know what was going on and claimed to have been told over the phone that the hearing would be rescheduled. They said they got a call back to show up at a location in the Greenspoint area to talk about their case, but when they showed up, the mother and kids were arrested.
“The issue of Cristina missing her court hearing was a technical violation that could have been resolved,” a family attorney said.
Arellano Jr., a United States citizen, was there and tried to explain what happened, attorneys said. He said he was threatened by ICE agents if he interfered. He said his children were crying as they and Salazar were taken into custody.
“They were shocked and surprised that they were separated,” immigration lawyer Isaias Torres said.
Torres and Silvia Mintz are representing the family. They said that Salazar was born in Mexico and married Arellano Jr. in 2019.
“The reason she was arrested, they were told, is that she failed to go to an immigration hearing,” Torres said.
The family’s attorneys said it was cold the night Salazar and the children were taken to Mexico and they were not allowed to get coats. They also said the woman and her children had no money and no contacts in Reynosa.
Arellano Jr. said he wants his family back so they can go through the immigration process legally.
His attorneys said some circumstances were out of their control that led to them being deported. One of those factors was that the family didn’t have legal representation at the time of the impromptu meeting at which they were arrested.
“This case shouldn’t have gone to this extreme. There were options, legal options, that were available and he was not given those opportunities,” Torres said. “They thought that they were complying and doing as they were told. And it turns out that they were not.”
The family and their attorneys plan to file a complaint with the Office of Inspector General as well as petitions with immigration. But, since they’re out of the country, it could take several months.
ICE confirmed that Salazar did not report to a scheduled immigration hearing and was ordered to be removed by an immigration judge with the Justice Department’s Executive Office for Immigration Review.
KHOU 11 reached out to the Justice Department’s EOIR which makes decisions based on individual cases and determines if a noncitizen is subject to removal or eligible for relief from removal. We have not received a response.
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Heated insoles explode inside Minnesota man’s boots, melting his skin off
Tyler Morris of Trimont, Minnesota said he purchased the insoles on Amazon last year to use while hunting and fishing.
TRIMONT, Minn. — “Don’t do it.”
That’s the message Mikaela Morris of Trimont, Minn. has for anyone interested in purchasing rechargeable heated apparel products to keep warm this winter. In a Facebook post, she shared photos of her husband Tyler’s charred foot and melted-off skin after his rechargeable insoles, which were not turned on at the time, exploded inside his boots.
Tyler said he purchased the insoles on Amazon last year to use while hunting and fishing. The insoles, sold by the company iHEAT based in China, are no longer available on Amazon. KARE contacted Amazon and iHEAT for comment but has not heard back.
Tyler said when he took the insoles out again this fall for deer hunting season, they weren’t working very well but he kept them in his boots for added comfort.
“I guess I should have taken them out because I was not using them; they were not on,” Tyler said. “They were just in my boots, and all of a sudden the one exploded.”
On Thursday, Dec. 12, Tyler said he was preparing to put a fish house on the lake when he felt a sharp pain in his right foot.
“It just felt like a knife stabbed me in my heel,” he recalled. “Then it started getting super, super hot, and I started freaking out, and there was white smoke just billowing out of my boot.”
Tyler said he managed to kick his boot off within five seconds, but half of his sock was already burning.
“The insole came out in pieces,” he said, adding that he’s thankful he was wearing wool socks and shoes without laces, which likely saved him an even worse injury than the second and third-degree burns he sustained on his right foot.
“This happens apparently all the time,” Tyler said. “In fact, when we got to Hennepin County, the doctor there told us that I was the third person she had seen for this this week.”
Tyler lost feeling in some parts of his foot and was told by doctors he might need skin grafts. He and Mikaela are warning others to do extensive research before buying any rechargeable apparel products, especially those manufactured overseas and not locally, or to avoid buying similar products altogether.
“I would say on any of it,” Mikaela said. “Heated insoles, socks, vests, coats, gloves because not only could it have been his foot, it could have been his hand, it could have been his, if he had socks on, it could have been his whole leg.”
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West St. Paul Police remembers Larry Raasch, a volunteer for 25 years
Larry Raasch volunteered at the department for 25 years.
WEST ST PAUL, Minn. — The West St. Paul Police Department has lost one of its most decorated servants.
Larry Raasch volunteered as a reserve officer for 25 years, logging more than 4,000 hours.
“He really cared about this department and this community,” said West St. Paul Police Chief Brian Sturgeon.
Raasch volunteered at least eight hours a week at the West St. Paul Police station. Before he started helping out there, he was a reserve for the St. Paul Police Department. In total, he’s spent more than 50 years volunteering at police departments.
“He loved this community that’s what it was, he loved the community, he loved the department, he loved the city, he loved his neighbors, he loved the business owners in town, and he just wanted to give back. That’s why he was doing what’s he doing,” Sturgeon said.
Raasch’s daughter Lisa McDermott said her father lived to serve the community. He would drive people around town if they needed a ride and would help anyone who needed it. His life has been dedicated to service. She said her father is a Vietnam Veteran. He was stationed in Munich, Germany as a medic.
Captain of the reserves Mike Whebbe said he was dedicated to serving his community. He’s worked alongside Raasch for decades.
Raasch was one of the police department’s 15 reserves. Sturgeon said they assist sworn officers and departments, attend community events, help with prisoner transport, and traffic control. Sturgeon said the reserves help the department immensely and have save them a lot of money.
“Over the course of the 25 years, it’s close to $1 million,” he said.
Sturgeon said two years, he received the President’s Volunteer Service Lifetime Achievement award.
“He dedicated over 4,000 hours. I’m sure it was a lot more than that,” Sturgeon said.
He said Raasch was one of the oldest reserves, his “meticulous” nature earned him a spot helping out in the property room as a volunteer evidence tech.
“His age didn’t keep him down though. He was always available to us whenever we needed it. We were very appreciative of his dedication to this community,” he said. “He just wanted to be a part of this organization. He wanted to be a part of this city and being a reserve was one way he could be a part of this organization and this community.”
Sturgeon said he’ll miss hearing Raasch say “hi, good morning, good afternoon, how are you doing,” when he would walk into the department. He said no one will ever be able to fill his shoes.
“Larry was a character, he was a one-of-a-kind,” Sturgeon said. “We’ve all learned a lot from him, especially the reserves. I mean like I said he coached and mentored the younger reserves.”
He said it’s going to be hard without him. Sturgeon said Raasch was the embodiment of an outstanding community member, who made West St. Paul a safer and brighter place.
“He’s one of a kind that’s for sure and he’s going to be greatly missed,” Sturgeon said.
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