Wednesday, June 22, 2011


    So the word is that US Airways may have a lawsuit against their company because a few days back a young African American college student Deshon Marman was asked to pull up his pants and was arrested over the incident and escorted off the plane.

     But now recently A man boarded a US Airway flight with a bra and panties, heels  and thigh highs and had nothing said to him after multiple passengers made complaints. See things are sounding really fishy.
     "This photo of the scantily clad man was provided to The Chronicle by Jill Tarlow, a passenger on the June 9 flight from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., to Phoenix. Tarlow said other passengers had complained to airline workers before the plane boarded, but that employees had ignored those complaints."

    US Airways spokeswoman Valerie Wunder confirmed she’d received the photo before last week’s incident in San Francisco and had spoken to Tarlow, but said employees had been correct not to ask the man to cover himself.“We don’t have a dress code policy,” Wunder said. “Obviously, if their private parts are exposed, that’s not appropriate. … So if they’re not exposing their private parts, they’re allowed to fly.”

    So, does that mean Deshon Marman, the University of New Mexico player yanked from an Albuquerque-bound flight June 15 at SFO, was displaying his private parts when his pajama pants sagged to mid-thigh level?

    Wunder declined to comment on the incident directly. Police have said only that Marman’s boxer shorts were exposed, and his attorney said surveillance video would prove Marman’s skin had not been visibleMarman’s attorney, Joe O’Sullivan, said his client had been stereotyped by US Airways as a thug, and that the airline was guilty of racial discrimination for asking Marman to adjust his clothes. Marman is African American.

   “It just shows the hypocrisy involved,” O’Sullivan said after he viewed the photo of the cross-dressing passenger. “They let a drag queen board a flight and welcomed him with open arms. Employees didn’t ask him to cover up.

   He didn’t have to talk to the pilot. They didn’t try to remove him from the plane — and many people would find his attire repugnant.”O’Sullivan added, “A white man is allowed to fly in underwear without question, but my client was asked to pull up his pajama pants because they hung below his waist.”(http://bossip.com/403223/freaks92380/)

  
Watch video of Deshon Marman's incident below :

     As you can see in the video Marman was polite and was just standing up for his self. They were really doing the most in how they approached him and calling the cops SMH. He was most defiantly right when he said "I am just like everyone else"

    Its crazy how US Airways spokeswoman had the nerve to say that they do not have a dress code, so the employees were correct not to ask the man with the women's undergarments on to cover up. That makes no sense because they are going to tell a man that is fully clothed but has his pants slightly sagged to cover up and have him arrested?

Check out Deshon's Side of the story:

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