Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Pakistani Man, 57, Sued For Molesting US Teenage Girl During Flight

Darpan News Desk , 08 Sep, 2015 12:21 PM
  • Pakistani Man, 57, Sued For Molesting US Teenage Girl During Flight
The parents of a girl who reported being inappropriately touched by a man, later identified as a Pakistani citizen, while flying alone from New York to Iowa have sued the man and American Airlines, saying the airline failed to protect the girl.
 
Muhammad Asif Chaudhry, 57, was arrested after the July flight on charges including engaging in sexual contact with a victim between the ages of 12 and 16. The Pakistani citizen, who has denied the accusations, has since been released on bond.
 
The lawsuit alleges that Chaudhry moved to an empty seat beside the girl. The girl texted her mother, who had just arrived at work in Iowa, saying she was woken up by a man inappropriately touching her with his foot and later his hand.
 
"I can't move cause the seat belt sign is on and I want to get away," the girl said in texts turned over to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), according to the lawsuit. She began another text, "Mommy, I'm scared...," and said a man tried to touch her genitals. The family's attorney, Brett Beatty, said the mother was so stunned by the texts that she fainted.
 
When Chaudhry left the seat to use the restroom, the girl alerted a flight attendant, who moved her to a vacant first-class seat. The airline reported the girl's complaint to authorities, and an FBI agent met Chaudhry when the flight, the first leg of her trip, landed in Chicago.
 
"American cares deeply about our young passengers and is committed to providing a safe travel experience for them," spokesman Josh Freed said in a statement Friday, a day after the lawsuit was filed in federal court in Des Moines. "We take these matters very seriously and have cooperated fully and immediately with law enforcement's investigation of the suspect."
 
Chaudhry denied touching the girl, according to the FBI. The girl gave the investigating agent a cellphone photo she had taken with Chaudhry's leg across her lap, the agent said, according to the documents filed by the agent in Chaudhry's criminal case.
 
 
Chaudhry told the FBI he was in the US on vacation and to visit family in Oklahoma. He was released on bond after relatives helped pay his $100,000 bail. He is scheduled to appear in court on Tuesday in Chicago.
 
"I'm not allowed to talk. My friend will talk to you later," Chaudhry said when reached by phone Monday by The Associated Press.
 
His attorney didn't respond to messages seeking comment that were left at his office Friday and Monday, a holiday.
 
Beatty, the attorney for the girl's family, said American Airlines should have placed the girl in a seat where she could be monitored. American Airlines charges $150 extra for minors traveling alone.
 
Similar incidents have been reported in recent years, including a Pennsylvania man's arrest this summer after a 16-year-old girl reported being awoken by a man inappropriately touching her. A New Jersey man was sentenced to more than eight years in prison in January 2014 for putting his hands in a woman's shirt and shorts while she was sleeping during a flight in 2012

MORE National ARTICLES

Police Officer's Role In Premier Paul Davis Ad Raises Questions Of Rights, Restrictions

ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — The uproar this week over a police inspector's role in an online video endorsing the Newfoundland and Labrador premier is raising questions about rights and acceptable restrictions.

Police Officer's Role In Premier Paul Davis Ad Raises Questions Of Rights, Restrictions

Supreme Court Dismisses Chevron Appeal In Ecuador Environmental Damages Case

Supreme Court Dismisses Chevron Appeal In Ecuador Environmental Damages Case
The 7-0 ruling allows the case to proceed in Canada, but it makes no finding on the merits of the long-running legal saga that has played out in courtrooms across the Western Hemisphere.

Supreme Court Dismisses Chevron Appeal In Ecuador Environmental Damages Case

Photo Project With The New Yorker Magazine Features Residential School Survivors

Photo Project With The New Yorker Magazine Features Residential School Survivors
International photojournalist Daniella Zalcman has partnered with The New Yorker magazine to show her project on Canada's residential school survivors.

Photo Project With The New Yorker Magazine Features Residential School Survivors

Manitoba Government Adds Support Money For Syrian Refugees

Premier Greg Selinger says an extra $40,000 is being given to settlement service providers in the province, so that they can accommodate hundreds more refugees in the coming months.

Manitoba Government Adds Support Money For Syrian Refugees

First Byelection Since NDP Victory In Alberta Goes To Wildrose Party

First Byelection Since NDP Victory In Alberta Goes To Wildrose Party
Wildrose Leader Brian Jean, a former Conservative MP under Harper, told party supporters to take a short breather before getting back to the campaign grind.

First Byelection Since NDP Victory In Alberta Goes To Wildrose Party

Conservative Yukon Election Candidate Makes Late-night Arrest Of Sign Vandal

Conservative Yukon Election Candidate Makes Late-night Arrest Of Sign Vandal
WHITEHORSE — A Conservative federal election candidate in Yukon donned in camouflage gear emerged from the bush on a dark, rainy night to catch someone vandalizing his campaign signs.

Conservative Yukon Election Candidate Makes Late-night Arrest Of Sign Vandal