We flew SW on May 7 from Hartford. We checked in online and all but one of us received our boarding passes, DS age 2.5. We called SW and were told that sometimes they flag people for security purposes and not to worry. So we didn't. When we arrived at the counter to check our baggage, we were told that we needed to see the person at the gate regarding our son's boarding pass. We arrived at the gate and were told that the flight was overbooked, we would not be getting on the flight because our DS's name closely matched someone on the no fly list (Basically he was the only person not checked in and they gave his seat away, even though he was part of our family) I almost passed out.
I understand security and I wouldn't want it any other way (anything that I see about 9/11 causes me to cry) but my biggest problem was that we were passed on from person to person and 20 minutes before boarding were told this. Luckily, a nice couple took a bump and gave us their seats. For the flight back we printed out the boarding passes (again, not DS) and went to SW counter the day before the flight where we were promptly handed the boarding pass. In Orlando, the CS rep said that basically no one wanted to tell us that the flight was overbooked, so they let someone else take care of it. Now we need to fill out paperwork with the TSA to have him cleared to fly.
How can SW or any other airline do this? Can't they issue boarding passes and then stop someone at the gate who looks suspicious? They don't take ages, so it is impossible for them to match an age with the person.
Has this happened to anyone before?
I understand security and I wouldn't want it any other way (anything that I see about 9/11 causes me to cry) but my biggest problem was that we were passed on from person to person and 20 minutes before boarding were told this. Luckily, a nice couple took a bump and gave us their seats. For the flight back we printed out the boarding passes (again, not DS) and went to SW counter the day before the flight where we were promptly handed the boarding pass. In Orlando, the CS rep said that basically no one wanted to tell us that the flight was overbooked, so they let someone else take care of it. Now we need to fill out paperwork with the TSA to have him cleared to fly.
How can SW or any other airline do this? Can't they issue boarding passes and then stop someone at the gate who looks suspicious? They don't take ages, so it is impossible for them to match an age with the person.
Has this happened to anyone before?