Boston

Teen girl files suit over alleged hidden camera in bathroom on flight to Boston

The 14-year-old said that after she used the toilet, she noticed an iPhone that was mostly hidden by red airline tape reading “Remove from service” — but the camera flash was glowing, according to the lawsuit, filed in North Carolina

Attorney Paul T. Llewellyn, representing the victim, provided this photo to NBC10 Boston on Sept. 17, 2023, of the alleged hidden camera that was found on American Airlines flight 1441 from Charlotte to Boston.

The family of a North Carolina teenager is suing American Airlines, saying that a flight attendant taped an iPhone to an airplane toilet to record her using the restroom during a September flight to Boston.

Lawyers for the 14-year-old and her parents say that American “knew or should have known the flight attendant was a danger.” They say the failure of other crew members to confiscate the employee's phone allowed him to destroy evidence.

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The lawsuit against American and the unidentified flight attendant was filed Friday in U.S. district court in North Carolina.

American said the flight attendant was “withheld from service” immediately after the alleged incident and has not worked since.

“We take this matter very seriously and have been fully cooperating with law enforcement in their investigation, as safety and security are our highest priorities,” American said in a prepared statement.

Passengers aboard American Airlines flight 1441 flying from Charlotte to Boston reported to local media that a woman reported her teenage daughter noticed the camera in the first-class lavatory. Law enforcement officers met the plane at the gate after it landed Sept. 2.

According to the lawsuit, the incident happened on a Sept. 2 flight from Charlotte to Boston.

The girl said that while she was waiting to use a bathroom in the economy section, where her family was sitting, the flight attendant told her to use one in the first-class cabin. He entered the bathroom first, saying he needed to wash his hands, then emerged a minute later to tell the girl that the seat was broken but not to worry about it.

The girl said that after she used the toilet, she noticed an iPhone that was mostly hidden by red airline tape reading “Remove from service” — but the camera flash was glowing.

The girl “was shocked and scared,” according to the lawsuit. “It immediately occurred to her that someone had put the phone there to film her using the toilet.”

She took her own picture of the device.

Lawyers for the family suggested that the flight attendant removed the phone and erased images of the girl before letting her father see his iPhone photos.

The family said an FBI agent later told the girl's mother they did not arrest the man because they did not find any incriminating images on his phone.

The family's lawyers said they do not know the flight attendant's name, where he lives or whether he still works for American. The 14-year-old is undergoing therapy for trauma, they said.

"Flying's not a pleasant experience, but this is the last thing that we should be worried about when we're traveling with our families, with our children. So I hope American Airlines don't just pay lip service and finally do take this matter extremely seriously," attorney Paul T. Llewellyn told NBC10 Boston Thursday, before the lawsuit was filed.

Neither the girl nor her family are identified in the lawsuit. The Associated Press and NBC10 Boston do not name victims of sexual assault or abuse unless they come forward publicly.

Attorney Paul T. Llewellyn, representing the victim, provided this photo to NBC10 Boston on Sept. 17, 2023, of the alleged hidden camera that was found on American Airlines flight 1441 from Charlotte to Boston.

Massachusetts State Police initially reported to WSOC-TV in North Carolina that the episode involved a juvenile, a flight attendant and a cell phone. But State Police later deferred to the FBI as the primary investigating agency because the episode happened in the air, where the FBI has jurisdiction.

American is based in Fort Worth, Texas, and has a major operation at the airport in Charlotte.

NBC10 Boston's Malcolm Johnson contributed to this report

The Associated Press/NBC
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