Two United Airlines passengers are being compensated after a woman said that her fiancé was "bumped" to an economy seat so "a part of the crew could sit in first class instead."
The incident was the focus of a viral TikTok video shared by Danielle Schwab (@watergirl8296). In the clip, the woman, "who just got engaged," said she and her fiancé were on a flight from London's Heathrow Airport to Chicago when the fiancé was "booted" out of first class.
A United spokesperson told Newsweek: "The seats we normally reserve for crew members to take their required rest breaks weren't working on this flight, so we unfortunately had to reassign two customers to Premium Plus rather than cancel the flight.
"We understand the customers' frustration and are refunding the price difference for their seats and giving them each a $1,500 certificate for future travel," the spokesperson said.
Seats in Premium Plus are "closer to the front of the aircraft and have additional legroom, elbow room and recline," according to the airline's website.
In a subsequent video shared by the poster, the woman said four passengers were "booted" from first class, including her fiancé.
According to her fiancé, "There was another person who got kicked back to coach and she received compensation."
Later, the couple were allegedly told, "There's nothing we could do," the woman said. They were directed to "submit a claim online" and "no one would talk to us," she explained in the subsequent video.
In March, the U.S. Transportation Security Administration (TSA) received 15,545 complaints (22.3 complaints per 100,000 passengers) from the public via phone or email, according to the latest Air Travel Consumer Report by the Department of Transportation, released in May.
The report also said the TSA received 38 airline-related complaints in March about such matters as baggage requirements, lost baggage, policy/regulations and wheelchair assistance.
Dan Bubb, a professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, who is a historian and former airline pilot, told Newsweek in January that pilots and flight attendants have "a secret compartment in the top of the aircraft that is inaccessible and invisible to passengers" where they can retire.
Patrick Smith, an airline pilot and the author of Cockpit Confidential, previously told Newsweek that on aircraft that don't have these bunks a designated first- or business-class seat is used instead, often cordoned off with a curtain.