Sting in the tail for United Airlines: Scorpion attacks passenger on plane
The United Airlines PR department is having a busy week. First it deals with the fallout from a video showing aviation police dragging a man from one of its flight – then a scorpion stings a passenger travelling on another of its planes.
Canadians Richard and Linda Bell were returning to Calgary on a flight from Houston, Texas when a scorpion rudely interrupted their trip. The incident is understood to have happened on Sunday, the same day a Vietnamese man was forcibly removed from a United Airlines plane at Chicago O’Hare Airport.
‘Putting hospital in hospitality’: United Airlines mercilessly trolled over video firestorm https://t.co/femURQLRJQpic.twitter.com/D0FiaA6nZe
— RT (@RT_com) April 11, 2017
Speaking to Global News, Richard said: “It fell on my hair – I grabbed it. I was hanging onto it by it’s tail.” His wife initially didn’t realise what had happened.
“It really didn’t dawn on me, because we were on a plane from Houston, I looked down and thought, oh that kind of looks like a little lobster,” she said.
The Bells quickly learned it wasn’t, however.
“A Mexican guy next to me said, ‘That’s a scorpion and it’s dangerous,’ so I dropped it on my plate. Then I went to go pick it up again and that’s when it stung me – it felt like a wasp sting,” Richard said.
He then threw the predatory arachnid to the floor and another passenger finished it off with a quick stomp, after which a flight attendant disposed of its remains.
United Airlines needs to retire, man. A couple days after the man was dragged off the plane, someone gets stung by a scorpion. 😂😂😂😂
— Aaron Nicholson (@Aar0nNicholson) April 13, 2017
A man was stung by a scorpion on a United Airlines flight, if only there was a doctor onboard....... OH WAIT!! 🤦🏻♂️
— gary walls (@gary_walls) April 14, 2017
#unitedairlines one poor man being stung by a scorpion. The scorpion was forced up there in the luggage hold after losing its seat
— filmmaker (@apprenticetrump) April 14, 2017
The concerned couple used the plane's WIFI to find out if the sting posed any threat to Richard. Apart from the obvious fright of having a scorpion land on his head in mid-air, he didn’t have any adverse reaction to the sting. Paramedics did board the plane, however, and found that Richard showed “no signs of distress.”
READ MORE: United Airlines stock plummeted by over $800mn after passenger fiasco
How the stowaway scorpion came to be on the United flight isn’t clear. It seems likely, however, that due to its hiding in the overhead bin, a fellow traveller, seemingly with a penchat for exoctic animals, probably stored it in their luggage.
Scorpion stings are rarely fatal, though they can be quite uncomfortable. People affected can experience a tingling or burning sensation where bitten and can have difficulty breathing or swallowing.
United Airlines are investigating the incident