August 11, 2010 7:42 PM

Steven Slater Makes Bail after JetBlue Meltdown

(CBS/AP)  A JetBlue flight attendant who argued with a passenger on a plane before making a grand exit down its emergency slide has been released on bail in New York.

A spokesman for the city's jails confirms Steven Slater was released Tuesday night. Slater was picked up by a minivan and driven away.

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Department of Correction spokesman Stephen Morello doesn't have details on who posted the $2,500 bail.

Slater has been charged with felonies but elevated to folk hero status by thousands of people who shrug off allegations he endangered others and praise him for his take-this-job-and-shove-it moment.

"For 20 years, I thought about it," said Slater in an exclusive interview with the City Room blog at the New York Times. "But you never think you're going to do it."

A defense attorney says Slater didn't put anyone in danger on the Pittsburgh-to-New York flight.

Prosecutors say the JetBlue flight attendant flipped out over a fight with an agitated traveler Monday, cursing over the intercom before grabbing some beer from the plane's galley and deploying the emergency slide at Kennedy Airport.

Passenger Kati Doebler tells The Associated Press travelers gasped and giggled after flight attendant Steven Slater's comments Monday.

Slater, whose father was an airline pilot, wore a slight smile Tuesday as he was led into a state court in Queens to be arraigned on charges of criminal mischief, reckless endangerment and trespassing, counts that carry a maximum penalty of seven years in prison.

Slater, a 38-year-old airline veteran who lives steps from the Queens beach a few miles from the airport, had been flying long enough to see much of the gleam of the air travel experience tarnished by frayed nerves, rising fees, plummeting airline profits and packed cabins.

"One by one all of these niceties have been removed from the customer experience. I think subconsciously, it's causing passengers to be very angry," said Pauline Frommer, creator of the Pauline Frommer Guides and daughter of Arthur Frommer. "There's an us-versus-them mentality."

Sentiment online appeared to fall in Slater's court. By early Tuesday afternoon, more than 20,000 people had declared themselves supporters of Slater on Facebook, and the number was growing by thousands every hour. At least one fan set up a legal fund on his behalf.

"Overwhelmingly people said it should have been the passenger who was ejected from the plane," said George Hobica, founder of AirfareWatchdog.com, speaking about response to his site's blog on the incident. "I've never seen such an outpouring of support for a flight attendant."

Slater's attorney, Howard Turman, said his client had been drawn into a fight between two female passengers over space in the overhead bins as the Pittsburgh-to-New York flight was awaiting takeoff. Somehow, Slater was hit in the head, Turman said.

After JetBlue Flight 1052 landed in New York, one of the women who had been asked to gate-check her bag was enraged that it wasn't immediately available, Turman said.

"The woman was outraged and cursed him out a great deal," Turman said. "At some point, I think he just wanted to avoid conflict with her."

That's when he deployed the slide, Turman said. A spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which controls the airport, said Slater took at least one beer from the plane galley on his way out.

"Those of you who have shown dignity and respect these last 20 years, thanks for a great ride," Slater said over the plane's loudspeaker, according to prosecutors.

Prosecutors said Slater's actions could have been deadly if ground crew workers had been hit by the emergency slide, which deploys with a force of 3,000 pounds per square inch. Turman said Slater had opened the hatch and made sure no one was in the slide's path before deploying it.

Passenger Phil Catelinet said he heard Slater's profanity-laced announcement over the public address system before he left the plane. He said Slater ended by saying, "I've had it." He described the announcement as "the most interesting part of the day to that point" but didn't see Slater use the exit slide or grab the beer.

It wasn't until he saw Slater on an airport train and overheard him talking about the escapade that he put it together.

"He was smiling. He was happy he'd done this," Catelinet told NBC's "Today."

Initially, authorities blamed Slater's blowup on a passenger refusing to sit down as the plane taxied to the gate. But after interviewing more witnesses, investigators confirmed the dispute had begun in Pittsburgh and resumed at the end of the flight, a law enforcement official told The Associated Press, speaking on condition of anonymity because the investigation was ongoing.

JetBlue spokesman Mateo Lleras said Slater had been removed from duty pending an investigation. Prosecutors said no criminal allegations had been made against the passenger.

Turman said Slater was under stress because his mother, Diane Slater of Thousand Oaks, Calif., has lung cancer. His father, a pilot for American Airlines, died more than a decade ago. Reached at home by phone, his mother declined to comment.

"He's not this type of individual at all," said Slater's former grandfather-in-law, Harry Niethamer. "He's always been a gentleman and he loves that job. He had opportunities to do other things but he always went back to that type of work and apparently was always good at it."

Niethamer, 82, of Downey, Calif., said his granddaughter was previously married to Slater and they have a son who is now in his mid-teens. He said Slater was a flight attendant for different airlines over many years.

With airlines responding to waning passenger demand by cutting flights and packing remaining ones to the gills, it's no surprise many people can see Slater's side of the story, said Thom McDaniel, a union president and flight attendant at Southwest Airlines for 18 years.

"The response has been amazing and that's probably in part because those people have been stuck on a lot of full, hot planes in the last three months," he said.

© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 18 Comments
by brynaweiss August 11, 2010 8:47 AM EDT
i wish someone would expose who this obnoxios woman is! let her feel the heat!
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by irreverent1-2009 August 11, 2010 8:43 AM EDT
If there were Steven Slater t-shirts I would wear one. He's not just standing up for self respect he is a symbol of personal defiance against corporations, especially the airline industry!
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by vegas2go August 11, 2010 6:45 AM EDT
Shame on you, Jet Blue! You should be BackingUp your Employees, not Suspending them. There's something terribly wrong with this Picture; that a good Employee is driven to do this. You need to look at your own Business Practices/employee treatment, to see what's really going on here......
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by Birdman04 August 11, 2010 6:37 AM EDT
Heck this guy will make a fortune on the talk show circuit. He is set for life.
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by Lawyers-Guns-n-Money06 August 11, 2010 7:07 AM EDT
Maybe he can run for mayor in opposition to Levi.
by vegas2go August 11, 2010 5:56 AM EDT
This woman passenger hits the Flight Attendant; & the Flight Attendant is charged......What is wrong with this Picture? SHE should have been the one to be Charged with Assault & went to jail!!!
Reply to this comment
by run2jazz2 August 11, 2010 5:48 AM EDT
In today's job market people need to use some common sense before doing acts of aggresion. I work among many different types of people from different cultures and many wonder why I just come and do my job and go home.

I have a co-worker who seems to take everything literally as he is 64 and thinks that everyone is trying to make him irrelevant. I told him to stay cool and not let things get to him, but I wonder about him.

I don't think he will go "Postal" but I do think that he is a guy that if someone says the wrong thing to him this dude will probably let them have a piece of his mind.
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by chief77777 August 11, 2010 3:33 AM EDT
This guy is light in his loafers ...I heard his interview....there are ways to handle situations like this and the way he did it is not one of them!
Reply to this comment
by voxpopulus August 11, 2010 3:50 AM EDT
Walk a mile in those loafers and you might think differently. As a passenger I have had to put up with too many pigs like that woman. I wish she'd been pushed down the chute.
by voxpopulus August 11, 2010 3:53 AM EDT
Incidentally, one may have one's own sexual insecurities, but this is not an incident that pertains to them in any way.
by TJphoto August 11, 2010 3:08 AM EDT
First things first. Boycott JetBlue. Like most corporations they do not understand that by putting their employees first is how you become #1, but they do understand money or the lack of it. That how David Barger (CEO) pay was increase by 67% last year.
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by MrsCamp August 11, 2010 1:59 AM EDT
I can't blame the guy. Workplaces are getting more and more toxic. Employees are back-stabbing, gossipy individuals who can't just go to work and do their job without bringing their bad attitude with them. Meanwhile, customers are rude, impatient, even abusive. There is only so much of that one person can put up with.

Scimajor, this man is not a criminal. What's really sick is how people- perhaps you are one of them- think this kind of behavior on the part of consumers is acceptable. Until people start doing something about it, we will continue to see incidents like this. Look at how many people are on antidepressants these days. This guy didn't hurt anyone; maybe deploying the airline slide wasn't the best idea, but I don't think he was a danger to anyone.

Suffering abuse at the hands of consumers is not ok. Those working in any line of customer service have to deal with it on a regular basis. So stop excusing it.
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by Overruled1 August 11, 2010 12:45 AM EDT
These guys are overworked and under-appreciated. The first thing that must be understood is that the rules of conduct have changed with 911.
If a steward is directing you to cease your actions, you should follow the request. The steward was hit in the head by the uncooperative passanger's bag....His actions of course were stupid and actionable.
That being said, the uncooperative passanger who refused to follow the stewards orders should have been held for instigating an incident.

The steward could have a claim that he was psychologically impaired at the time and claim injury.
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