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Airline passenger fined $17G for tossing coins into plane's engine for 'luck'

  

Category:  News & Politics

By:  freefaller  •  4 years ago  •  7 comments

Airline passenger fined $17G for tossing coins into plane's engine for 'luck'

A 28-year-old man in China has been ordered to pay the equivalent of over US$17,000 in damages to an airline after he tossed some coins into a plane’s engine for good luck last year.

.Lu Chao was arrested after boarding a Lucky Air flight in Anqing, in the Anhui province, after the airline’s crew found two one-yuan coins on the ground near the plane’s engine. Lu later admitted he had tossed the coins for “luck” prior to the Feb. 17, 2019 flight.

As a result, the flight was canceled and Lucky Air was forced to accommodate or find lodging for the plane’s displaced passengers, the South China Morning Post reported.

Lu himself was also detained by Anqing police for 10 days.

Days later, Lucky Air announced their intentions to press charges against Lu, who they claimed was responsible for over $20,000 in losses.

"The incident caused a direct economic loss of nearly 140,000 yuan, and our company will press charges against the passenger in accordance with the law," reps for Lucky Air said in a Feb. 22 statement. "Not only does tossing coins not give you good luck it will endanger aviation safety and land you in detention. You could be fined and prosecuted."

The suit was ultimately filed last May, the South China Morning Post reports.

According to the outlet, Lu was represented by his brother at a subsequent court appearance, where the defense argued that Lucky Air should have made an announcement prior to boarding, reminding passengers not to toss coins into the engines. (This superstition is not entirely uncommon in China; several incidents of passengers tossing coins into aircraft engines for luck have been reported in the last few years.)

Lu’s brother also argued that Lucky Air’s claimed maintenance costs were being inflated.

The court ruled that Lu was responsible for 120,000 yuan in damages (roughly $17,230) as well as court costs of 459 yuan, or around $65.

Lu had already said he could not afford to pay the damages.

In a separate case, a 31-year-old passenger scheduled to fly out of the Wuhan Tianhe International Airport in Hubei, China, was detained for 10 days in April 2019 after throwing three coins through a gap between the plane and jet bridge , also for luck.

The man later told police that his mother-in-law insisted he practice the superstitious act for a good flight, as it was his four-month-old daughter’s first time flying.


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Freefaller
Professor Quiet
1  author  Freefaller    4 years ago

Lol I guess he wasn't so lucky.  Superstitious nonsense.

 
 
 
Gordy327
Professor Guide
1.1  Gordy327  replied to  Freefaller @1    4 years ago
Superstitious nonsense.

Like all superstitions.

 
 
 
igknorantzrulz
PhD Quiet
2  igknorantzrulz    4 years ago

U can't Change fate

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
3  Kavika     4 years ago

Darn expensive superstition.

 
 
 
Ender
Professor Principal
4  Ender    4 years ago

What an idiot...

 
 
 
al Jizzerror
Masters Expert
5  al Jizzerror    4 years ago

I just posted this comment on another article:

When I was in a fighter squadron on the USS Independence.  We had a problem with aircraft engines "fodding out".  FOD is foreign object damage.  A foreign object in a jet turbine cause the blades (which spin at extremely high speeds) to break off.  This causes a chain reaction that can cause the engine to explode which can injure personnel close to the aircraft.

Twice a day we would "walk" the flight deck side by side picking up any loose objects on the deck.  We never found anything.  Because we had a high number of FOD incidents, we changed operating procedures. We also started having the engines inspected when planes on the catapults that were ready for take off.  The inspections required someone on the flight line to inspect each engine by peering into the intakes before the aircraft went to "high power".  Because this was not standard procedure pilots were not used to this extra step.  One pilot went to high power while his engine was being inspected and we lost a crew mate.

Eventually, the problem was solved.  The aircraft were being sabotaged by a Marine who was hiding on a catwalk shooting BBs into intakes.  He was arrested and removed from the ship before they informed us of his identity.  He was one of the Marines who guarded the nuclear weapons we had aboard.

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
6  Buzz of the Orient    4 years ago

Keep in mind that China's civilization is about 5000 years old and there are still some people who have not updated their knowledge of technology yet.

But then China's not the only place with superstion about throwing coins in places.  Three Coins in the Fountain:

three-coins-in-the-fountain.jpg

 
 

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