Photographer

 

Photography is not a crime. But for Miami shutterbug Sandy Dewitt, taking a picture of an airline employee was apparently enough to deem her a security risk and get her barred from flying.

U.S. Airways has stirred up a firestorm of protest from photography rights advocates after escorting Dewitt off a flight because she took a picture of an employee’s name tag. After witnessing Tonialla G. being rude to a number of passengers in the boarding area of a flight from Philadelphia International Airport to Miami on Friday, Dewitt pulled out her iPhone and snapped a picture. She planned to use the photo later when reporting Tonialla’s behavior to U.S. Airways officials.

However, once aboard the plane, Dewitt says the employee confronted her and forced her to delete the photo. And she wasn’t done there. Tonialla then went to the cabin and informed the pilot that Dewitt was a security risk and had her escorted from the plane by flight attendants.

“I announced to the other passengers that I was being removed because I took a photo,” Dewitt told Pixiq.com.

Dewitt was then told she could no longer fly U.S. Airways and had to catch a flight the next morning with SouthWest.

While Dewitt’s removal has sparked strong criticism for the airline, Todd Lehmacher, a spokesman for US Airways, says the photographer displayed belligerent behavior before she was kicked off. “Once onboard, she was using foul and explicit language,” Lehmacher told MSNBC. “She was removed at the request of the captain.”

So what do you think? Was Dewitt unfairly treated, or is US Airways within its rights to have the photographer escorted off plane?