CBS/AP/ October 19, 2010, 3:37 PM

JetBlue Attendant to Undergo Mental Evaluation

Russian Mi-24 helicopter gunships kick up dust near Urus Martan, Chechnya, Dec. 7, 1999. Syria has received dozens of Soviet-built Mi-8 transport helicopters and Mi-24 helicopter gunships since the Cold War, with the last deliveries taking place in the 1990s. Some of them require major repairs that can only be done by Russian repair plants.

Russian Mi-24 helicopter gunships kick up dust near Urus Martan, Chechnya, Dec. 7, 1999. Syria has received dozens of Soviet-built Mi-8 transport helicopters and Mi-24 helicopter gunships since the Cold War, with the last deliveries taking place in the 1990s. Some of them require major repairs that can only be done by Russian repair plants. / AP Photo

Updated 12:44 p.m. ET

The flight attendant accused of onboard antics that captured the nation's attention when he told off a passenger and slid down the plane's emergency chute with a beer will undergo a mental health evaluation with the aim of avoiding jail time in a possible plea deal.

Steven Slater, dressed in a trim blue suit, appeared in a Queens courtroom for a brief hearing on charges of criminal mischief, reckless endangerment and trespassing after last month's meltdown aboard a JetBlue Airways Corp. flight from Pittsburgh that had just landed at Kennedy International Airport.

He was working Aug. 9 when, he said, an argument took place with a rude passenger. After landing at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York, he went on the public address system, swore at a passenger who he claimed had treated him rudely, grabbed a beer and exited via an emergency chute, prosecutors said.

Attorneys on both sides said a deal was being discussed. Slater will be evaluated and may qualify for an alternative sentencing program, which means he could face community service and counseling instead of jail.

Queens District Attorney Richard A. Brown said Slater's willingness to be evaluated shows he's taking the charges more seriously than he had in the past. Slater had spoken out after the incident, as his public opinion swelled and hundreds of thousands of fans online cheered him for standing up to the inhospitable world of airline travel.

The district attorney, speaking to reporters after the hearing, said it would behoove the public to take the Aug. 9 incident more seriously, noting the slide cost $25,000 to repair and the plane had to be taken out of service afterward, causing passenger delays.

"It's no laughing matter," he said.

Slater's attorney, Daniel J. Horwitz, said his client was taking the matter very seriously and said he had been under tremendous pressure because of his terminally ill mother, recently deceased father, and health problems of his own. (Slater is HIV positive.) He said he was hoping prosecutors would take into account Slater's "long-standing and well-regarded reputation in the industry."

Horwitz said he hopes they can come to an agreement that favorably resolves the case, but he wouldn't specify what he was looking for. Brown said if Slater is admitted for alternative sentencing, he could undergo a treatment program lasting weeks, but he said it depended on the outcome of the evaluation and he's not ruling out the possibilty of jail time yet.

Slater, his head held high, left the court without speaking to the swell of reporters surrounding him. His publicist and attorney said he's in good spirits and has spent the past few weeks in California with his ailing mother.

Slater resigned from JetBlue last week after about three years there; JetBlue said only that he was no longer an employee. Slater has spent nearly 20 years in the airline industry, but it's not clear what he's going to do now.

"Right now we want to get past the criminal issues. Then we'll worry about the future," publicist Howard Bragman said. "Obviously he will be unemployed until all this is resolved."

Slater's lawyer had said he loved flying and wanted to return to work, and Slater's folk-hero status among tens of thousands of online fans had led some of them to urge the airline to keep him on.

The airline said at the time of the incident last month that Slater was suspended pending an investigation. It told employees in a memo that press coverage was not taking into account how much harm can be caused by emergency slides, which are deployed with a potentially deadly amount of force.

Despite Slater's online popularity, some as brusque and cranky throughout the 90-minute trip from Pittsburgh to New York. One passenger portrayed Slater as the instigator, saying he cursed without provocation at a woman who had asked about her bag.

More Steven Slater Coverage:

JetBlue Memo Questions Flight Attendant's Story
Flight Attendant's Grand Exit: A Dream for Some
Steven Slater's Story Continuing to Unravel?
Steven Slater Wants JetBlue Job Back
Slater's Story Discredited by JetBlue Fliers
JetBlue Flight Attendant: Hero or Heel?
JetBlue Episode Continues to Resonate
JetBlue Plays Coy about Flight Attendant Fiasco
Steven Slater Makes Bail after JetBlue Meltdown
JetBlue Flight Attendant Who Bolted Gets Bail
Angry JetBlue Attendant Exits Plane on Slide
© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
7 Comments Add a Comment
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ksmit2 says:
A flight attendant's job can get pretty bad sometimes. Some of them are
jerks, but probably a considerably smaller percentage than the passengers
they serve. Not making excuses here, but this guy had just "had it" that
day and torched his job. I wouldn't hire him back, he's not a hero. Basically this story should be over. To charge him for something this
stupid where no one was injured, is totally pointless.
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Myopinion046 says:
Psychology (93%+ being liberals) removed homosexuality from it's list of mental disorders way back in 1973, but no one said even one thing about that to my knowledge back then. If psychologists declare him incompetent to stand trial, then, they're protecting him like liberals are known to do.
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kenhamlett says:
There is nothing wrong with him. These mental cop outs simply means his lawyer told him he knew of a shrink that would say anything for a buck.
If this guy has problems you might as well lock up about half of the flight attendants. Grabbing the beers before his slide shows he was able to set his priorities.
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imnho says:
If he was fed up with his job he should have quit without do something that had possible lethal conquences. If someone had been standing in front of that slide they could easily been killed. His actions were not what I would consider heroic. What he did was dangerious and very inapropriate. The airline was totally justified in terminating his employment. He should serve some time to deter anyone else thinking of doing the same thing. He has fried his career in the airline industry and may find a lot of diffculty in securing employment in the future.
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democracy5 replies:
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"The airline was totally justified in terminating his employment.
*****

He resigned.
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Harden_Tar says:
I am apparently one of the few people that thinks this guy is a pretentious, attention seeking, "Drama Mama" who should have been fired right away to be never heard from again other than to be prosecuted. Your 15 minutes are up pal. The media should be ashamed of giving this guy any attention at all.
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skeeterandbucky replies:
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I agree. No deals. Hang 'im
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