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Delta Air fired a flight attendant who spoke out about a colleague who was accused of sexually assaulting him in exchange for a chance to appear in a security video

Delta Air Lines has terminated a newly hired flight attendant who made comments about a senior colleague after he allegedly sexually assaulted the new employee and several other male crew members at a graduation party for the Atlanta-based airline.

The accused flight attendant apparently managed to get away with sexually assaulting several crew members because he then offered his victims the chance to appear in various marketing campaigns, including Delta's safety videos.

The extraordinary allegations came to light in a new lawsuit against the airline filed in a Seattle district court by the former flight attendant, who publicly shamed the suspect in a semi-public Facebook post.

Aryasp Nejat was hired by Delta as a flight attendant in May 2023 and after completing nearly two months of intensive training, Nejat and his classmates attended what should have been a joyous graduation ceremony at Delta's Atlanta campus.

In addition to the usual flight attendant graduation ceremony moments where newly hired crew members get their uniform “wings” for the first time, Delta also invited a senior flight attendant to give the newbies a speech about why they shouldn't do that Support a union campaign.

Delta is known to be the only major U.S. airline that does not have a unionized flight attendant workforce, despite various attempts by several major unions, including the Association of Flight Attendants (AFA-CWA), which represents crew members at a number of airlines, including United and Alaska Airlines .

The AFA is again trying to drum up support for a unionization effort among Delta flight attendants, and this senior crew member has reportedly been asked by the airline to explain why he believes the new employees shouldn't sign a union card.

After the speech, that senior flight attendant conducted what was called a uniform inspection, but it allegedly turned into a “non-consensual, sexually assaultive touching” of Nejat, in which he reached into Nejat's pants close to his genitals and then rubbed his chest.

The suspect is also accused of sexually assaulting several other male flight attendants at the same graduation ceremony.

Nejat says he didn't report the suspect because he appeared to be “favored by Delta management,” but in April 2024, Nejat raised the issue in a semi-private Facebook group for flight attendants.

Responding to a post about Delta's recent campaign to stop flight attendants from signing union cards, Nejat, using a pseudonym, responded: “They yell at us and call us ungrateful pigs when we don't get excited about getting a $1 pay raise.” If you have received up to 2 US dollars, you will go to hell.”

Another crew member then made a comment about the senior Delta flight attendant having the power to choose which crew members appear in the next safety video.

Nejat responded that the suspect “sexually harasses attractive male FAs.” [flight attendants via quid pro quo agreements to them in safety videos and promotional materials.”

Several days later, Nejat noticed that the administrators of the Facebook group had removed his comments, so he decided to reply using his real name. This time, Nejat didn’t mention the allegations of sexual assault but complained that Delta had created a “hostile work environment” over its campaign to stop potential unionization.

Delta quickly found out about Nejat’s Facebook posts and suspended him without pay while it carried out an investigation. Nejat admitted that he had made the posts under an alias but reported the senior flight attendant for sexual assault to his managers.

Several months later, Delta wrapped up its investigation by terminating Nejat, while the sexual assault suspect continues to work for the airline, the lawsuit alleges.

Lawyers acting on behalf of Nejat believe Delta terminated their client because he made pro-union, anti-sexual harassment posts on social media, which could amount to retaliation under the Railway Labor Act.

The lawsuit also accuses Delta of sexual harassment as the airline put the suspect in a position of power that allowed him to commit his alleged crimes on his victims.

As Nejat was based out of Seattle Tacoma International Airport, he has asked a Washington state court to rule in his favor and order Delta to rehire him as a flight attendant.

Delta is yet to respond to the lawsuit.

In 2018, the airline introduced a new social media policy that restricts all employees from publishing any post that could be deemed “inappropriate” or that has the “ability to harm Delta.”

The policy also prohibits employees from making pro-union posts, noting that concerns about “pay, job duties, coworkers, issues with company policy, or general criticisms about Delta are best directed to your manager.”

in 2022, Delta faced a lawsuit from a flight attendant who was sacked for sharing a cartoon of Donald Trump wearing a KKK hood on Facebook.

At the time, a Delta spokesperson defended its strict social media policy, saying: “When Delta employees intermix Delta’s brand with conduct or content that does not reflect our values of professionalism, inclusion and respect, that conduct can result in discipline or termination.”

Mateusz Maszczynski


Mateusz Maszczynski honed his skills as an international flight attendant at the most prominent airline in the Middle East and has been flying ever since… most recently for a well known European airline. Matt is passionate about the aviation industry and has become an expert in passenger experience and human-centric stories. Always keeping an ear close to the ground, Matt’s industry insights, analysis and news coverage is frequently relied upon by some of the biggest names in journalism.