‘8 Hours Bottle-To-Throttle’? Southwest Pilot Arrested After TSA Smells Booze At Security

A Southwest Airlines pilot was arrested on Wednesday morning at Savannah/Hilton Head International Airport. The airline found another pilot and the flight departed to Chicago-Midway airport nearly five hours late.

He was stopped at the airport’s TSA checkpoint, and airport police called, because his breath smelled of alcohol.

According to the airline,

We’re aware of a situation involving an employee on Flight 3772 this morning from Savannah. The employee has been removed from duty. Customers were accommodated on other flights, and we apologize for the disruption to their travel plans. There’s nothing more important to Southwest than the safety of our employees and customers.

The 17-year veteran was taken into custody and later released on $3,500 bond.

Commercial airline pilots have to go at least 8 hours from their last drink prior to flying (“8 hours bottle-to-throttle”) and their blood alcohol limit is .04. One pilot once offered but it had been 9 hours since he drank! as an excuse, waving away being over the limit. Both rules matter.

George Burns once said, “Actually, it only takes one drink to get me loaded. Trouble is, I can’t remember if it’s the thirteenth or fourteenth.”

Some things are maybe even worse? One British Airways pilot snorted coke off a topless woman before trying to fly passengers to London and made the crucial mistake of putting details of the substance-filled orgy in writing to a flight attendant.

And once a pilot drank 17 rum and cokes before actually flying from Fargo to Minneapolis (he “fell on the floor before leaving the bar”) while “two other crew members shared seven pitchers of beer.”

Air travel can be a difficult career and drinking and other substance problems get hidden. Pilots with substance abuse problems are often wary of speaking up and seeking help, for fear of being sidelined, despite programs designed to encourage them to do so.

Pilots hide not just alcohol abuse but mental health conditions and that points to a fundamental conundrum: you want pilots to be open and seek help in order to promote safety, but once they’re open they’re a clearly identified risk and get removed from the cockpit. So the consequences of being open discourage that openness. Or at least that’s the fear many pilots have, not trusting any commitments to help rather than punish.

About Gary Leff

Gary Leff is one of the foremost experts in the field of miles, points, and frequent business travel - a topic he has covered since 2002. Co-founder of frequent flyer community InsideFlyer.com, emcee of the Freddie Awards, and named one of the "World's Top Travel Experts" by Conde' Nast Traveler (2010-Present) Gary has been a guest on most major news media, profiled in several top print publications, and published broadly on the topic of consumer loyalty. More About Gary »

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Comments

  1. And you can’t act as a pilot for any aircraft with a BAC beyond 0.04% also, but airlines often have 24 hour rules, which are considerably beyond the FAA minimum that you mentioned. Having retired from the sport with a commercial ticket my own observations are that almost everyone follows the rules on this. But obviously there will be those in any field whose ego says they can cut corners. (“I’m a pilot/surgeon/ship captain, etc. and know what I’m doing.”) You want people with self-confidence in such positions, but also ones who are humble enough to always do what is sensible. I wish there was a simple answer here.

  2. Ah, yes, the Speakeasy in Moorhead, MN . Fargo is across the river, but somehow NW pilots decided to head out for Italian food and a lot of drinks. They got busted because another customer overheard them talking about being pilots, and the flight they were flying in the morning.

    Turns out the customer’s mom was on that flight, so he called law enforcement and let them know. The FAA met them when they got to the gate. I wasnt working in FAR anymore, but I heard it was quite the scene!

    Play stupid games…..

  3. Many moons ago, during training, I arrived for my session a little hung over and a little delicate but functional (and legal). This some 12 or so hours after a night out.
    I arrived and must have looked a little haggard or something.
    We settled in and all was well until the instructor had me doing go arounds, evasive maneuvers, engine out procedures etc basically putting me under a lot of pressure.
    Every pore in my body opened up, I sweated profusely and when we shut down, he turned to me, smiled and said “You won’t do that again will you”.
    Lesson learned..after that, I never drink more than 2 drinks and it has to be more than 12hrs before I get in an aircraft.

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