September 8, 2010 9:02 AM

Steven Slater Plea Deal? Ex-JetBlue Flight Attendant Will Get Mental Evaluation After Top-Flight Tantrum

By
Naimah Jabali-Nash
Topics
Daily Blotter

Plea Deal In The Works For Ex-JetBlue Flight Attendant Steven Slater, Say Attorneys

Steven Slater (Personal Photo)

NEW YORK (CBS/AP) Steven Slater, the former JetBlue flight attendant who threw one of the most infamous hissy fits ever when he allegedly cursed out a passenger before sliding down the plane's emergency exit chute with a beer, is exploring a possible plea deal to avoid jail time for his antics.

PICTURES: Steven Slater, JetBlue Flight Attendant

Slater will undergo a mental health evaluation that may qualify him for an alternative sentencing program, meaning he could evade jail time altogether in exchange for community service, according to CBS affiliate WCBS.

However, prosecutors aren't making any promises just yet, and the incident could still land Slater with a criminal record.

The once vocal Slater was tight-lipped during his 5-minute court appearance in Queens, N.Y. Tuesday on criminal mischief, reckless endangerment and trespassing charges stemming from last month's meltdown aboard a JetBlue Airways Corp. flight from Pittsburgh that had just landed at John F. Kennedy International Airport.

According to prosecutors, Slater was working Aug. 9 when a tiff occurred between the flight attendant and a passenger. After landing at JFK International Airport, Slater allegedly used the public address system and cursed at the passenger who he claimed had treated him disrespectfully, grabbed a beer and made a getaway via an emergency exit chute.

Defense attorney Daniel J. Horwitz has said the passenger's "lack of civility" prompted Slater's behavior.

Queens District Attorney Richard A. Brown said if Slater is admitted for alternative sentencing, he could undergo a treatment program that will last weeks, but he said sentencing is contingent upon the outcome of Slater's evaluation and jail time is still a possibility.

After almost 20 years in the airline industry Slater resigned from JetBlue last week. He had been with the company for three years, and is uncertain of what he will do next.

"We hope to continue those discussions to favorably resolve this matter for Mr. Slater. He'd like to move on with his life," said Horwitz.

Slater is due back in court Oct. 19.

Complete Coverage of Steven Slater on Crimesider.

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Steven Slater, JetBlue Flight Attendant

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Add a Comment
by Wildwood1966 September 9, 2010 3:29 PM EDT
The slide alone is quite a cost - but I'm sure hindsight being foresight he wishes he hadn't done it - after many years (20+) in the airline industry I have run into ALL types - you can not please everybody best to bite your tongue and hope you're not on an international flight - I believe his airline career is over - perhaps a waiter? sia
Reply to this comment
by servorum September 8, 2010 11:26 PM EDT
This man is no hero, working class or otherwise. He's a sad example of the rage that infects this country and is spreading by the day.
Road rage, air rage, grocery store waiting line rage - what's next?
Reply to this comment
by Myopinion046 September 8, 2010 3:31 PM EDT
Yesterday, I posted that the overwhelmingly liberal and pro-gay Psychology will help him by declaring him incompetent. Let me change that to helping him by declaring him sane.
Reply to this comment
by Avacon September 8, 2010 3:22 PM EDT
Most if this is to silence him and make him an example to others from doing the same thing. From my perspective going after the airline and shutting it down is more profitable and economically stable for the domestic carrier industry in the United States and might be an accident blessing in disquise. No matter what most think, he is allowed to quit and corporate world want's this possibility to be minimized.
I have a police record already and the CEO's and the police should fear me at all costs since i am not intimated from heavy combat since the war. I assume the worse and they better be ready for it since if they lose, it is also permanent for them.
The criminal record is revenge and the prosecution wants career points for this. The company itself should have apologied for not protecting a long term employee from the irate and somewhat insane flyers of this airline and the others already have just after this incident.
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by newsterI September 8, 2010 1:24 PM EDT
After almost 20 years in the airline industry Slater resigned from JetBlue last week."

He means FIRED, he was FIRED not resigned.
Reply to this comment
by abbe91 September 9, 2010 9:50 AM EDT
Sorry, he quit.
by FoolKiller September 8, 2010 1:03 PM EDT
This POS's fifteen minutes of fame should have been over twenty minutes ago.
Reply to this comment
by either1or September 8, 2010 9:40 AM EDT
Just curious. But what was the total cost to Jetblue caused by Slater? If by chance he does go to jail, where do they send a sissy.
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