Naked and high flight attendant 'let himself down'

Haden Pentecost wearing a navy blue shirt and tie, looks at the cameraImage source, PA Media
Image caption,

Haden Pentecost was handed a suspended prison sentence

  • Published

A British Airways flight attendant who was found naked and high on drugs in a plane toilet during a transatlantic flight has been told by a judge he "let himself down".

Haden Pentecost, 41, was given a six-month prison sentence, suspended for a year.

Judge Hannah Duncan told him: "You don't need me to tell you just how serious this offence was. It would have been frightening for any passengers to see you in that position. You really let yourself down."

He was also ordered to complete 80 hours of unpaid work and pay £150 in costs after admitting performing an aviation function while impaired by drugs.

Isleworth Crown Court heard how Pentecost was due to work on a flight from San Francisco to London Heathrow in May.

Before the journey, he told colleagues he was suffering stomach cramps but insisted he was fit for duty.

Cabin manager co-workers later found him at the bottom of the stairs "dishevelled, pale, sweaty and erratic".

He locked himself in a bathroom and, when he emerged, was "completely naked and oblivious" to the fact he had no clothes on, prosecution barrister Natasha Lake said.

'Unique case'

A colleague struggled to make sense of what he was saying before dressing him and moving him into a free seat.

The captain was alerted and, after speaking with Pentecost, called for medical professionals on board.

He was found to have dilated pupils, was unable to answer what year it was or who the US president was and drank 15 to 20 bottles of water during the flight, the court was told.

His behaviour caused a "huge distraction" for the captain and crew, though no passengers were aware of his condition.

The flight landed at Heathrow where paramedics met the aircraft and took Pentecost to Hillingdon Hospital.

A blood sample later showed he had methamphetamine and amphetamine in his system, and he was later dismissed from his job.

Ms Lake said the offence carried a maximum penalty of two years' imprisonment, but there were no sentencing guidelines to assist because the case was "quite unique".

She told the court Pentecost had failed to complete pre-flight safety checks and that his colleagues had to manage the 10-and-a-half-hour flight without his assistance.

Jon Harrison, defending, said Pentecost had lost the career he "very much valued" and came before the court "a man without the profession that he sought to develop after Covid".

The judge said there was a "great deal of mitigation" in his case, including his previous good character and immediate guilty plea, and that his behaviour had not been aggressive or confrontational.

She reduced his sentence from 12 months to nine due to mitigation, and then to six months for his early plea, before suspending it for 12 months.

British Airways has been approached for comment.

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