New York - An Ivy League economist was escorted off an American Airlines plane after a fellow passenger incorrectly identified the mathematical equations he was scrawling for Arabic script, and suspected him of terrorism.
Italian economist Guido Menzio, 40, was en route to Syracuse to catch a connecting flight to Ontario, where he was scheduled to present a paper at Queen's University.
His neighbour had witnessed him scribbling the equations and subsequently handed a flight attendant a note.
The unidentified passenger had tried to make small talk with Mr Menzio, who was too focused on working out the maths he was about to present at the university, according to the Washington Post.
The plane remained on the tarmac for an extended period of time, as the passenger wary of Mr Menzio had feigned sickness, and the pilots steered the craft back to the gate.
Airline personnel escorted the passenger off, but shortly after requested Mr Menzio to also step out of the plane.
American Airlines spokesman Casey Norton said that the passenger, whom he was not at liberty to identify over privacy concerns, revealed that she had felt ill because of the perceived behaviour of her neighbour, Mr Menzio, an associate professor of economics at the University of Pennsylvania.
Mr Menzio was questioned by “some sort of agent” who told him he was suspected of terrorism, but he was ultimately deemed not a “credible threat” after showing what he had been writing.
Although Mr Menzio said he was “treated respectfully throughout”, he criticised airline protocols that fail to collect sufficient intelligence in situations like these. Airlines have “a security protocol that is too rigid -in the sense that once the whistle is blown everything stops without checks -and relies on the input of people who may be completely clueless,” he said.
In April, Southwest Airlines came under scrutiny after ejecting a University of California, Berkeley student, Khairuldeen Makhzoomi, who passengers overheard speaking Arabic before takeoff.
Mr Makhzoomi did not sue the airline, however; he only wanted an apology.
“Human dignity is the most valuable thing in the world, not money,” he said.
“If they apologised, maybe it would teach them to treat people equally.”
The Independent