A former flight attendant posed as a pilot and received hundreds of free flights, US authorities say
Dallas Pokornik used fake IDs to fraudulently obtain hundreds of free flights over four years, prosecutors said, facing up to 20 years in prison if convicted.
- Federal prosecutors in Hawaii charged Dallas Pokornik, former Air Canada flight attendant, with wire fraud after his extradition from Panama; he pleaded not guilty Tuesday and will appear before Chief U.S. Magistrate Judge Kenneth J. Mansfield.
- From July 17, 2017 to Oct. 7, 2019, court records show he worked as a flight attendant for Air Canada and then used that carrier's fake ID to request crew-only travel on three other airlines.
- Court filings detail that on Oct. 17, 2024 he used fake crew credentials and presented a fabricated Air Canada employee badge, while U.S. prosecutors say he requested a cockpit 'jump seat' though records do not confirm cockpit access.
- A U.S. magistrate ordered him to remain in custody after prosecutors urged detention as a serious flight risk; he is represented by the Federal Public Defender and faces up to 20 years in prison.
- The allegations prompted comparisons to 'Catch Me If You Can'; carriers and Air Canada did not respond to comment requests, and the indictment cited only cities for the airlines involved.
149 Articles
149 Articles
A 33-year-old Canadian was arrested in Panama for fraud on plane tickets that he allegedly committed for four years after leaving his stewardship. The man reportedly continued to pretend to be a...
Dallas Pokornik managed to defraud three airlines, but now he faces 20 years in prison.
A 33-year-old Torontoer who pretended to be a pilot for hundreds of free flights would risk up to 20 years in prison.
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