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Korean Air heiress jailed for 'nut rage' tantrum freed by Seoul High Court

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Korean Air heiress jailed for 'nut rage' tantrum freed by Seoul High Court


PUBLISHED : Friday, 22 May, 2015, 11:14am
UPDATED : Friday, 22 May, 2015, 9:07pm

Associated Press in Seoul

cho_for_split_afp.jpg


Cho Hyun-ah was an executive at her father's airline. She has been pictured bowing her head and burying her face in her hands after the case went to court. Photo: AFP

A South Korean court today suspended the prison term of the former Korean Air executive whose onboard “nut rage” tantrum delayed a flight last year, immediately ending her incarceration.

Cho Hyun-ah, who is the daughter of the airline’s chairman, did not violate aviation security law when she ordered the chief flight attendant off a December 5 flight, forcing it to return to the gate at John F Kennedy Airport in New York, according to the Seoul High Court.



The upper court sentenced Cho to 10 months in prison and then suspended the sentence for two years. It said she was guilty of using violence against flight attendants.

A lower court had earlier sentenced Cho to a year in prison. She has been locked up since her December arrest.

She achieved worldwide notoriety after an onboard tantrum triggered when a first class flight attendant served her macadamia nuts in a bag instead of on a dish. Cho, head of the airline’s cabin service at the time, had a heated, physical confrontation with members of the crew.

Swarmed by reporters at the court, she made no comment in front of the TV cameras, bowing her head and burying her face in her hands as the media pressed in and yelled for her to say something.

The incident was a lightning rod for anger in a country where the economy is dominated by family-run conglomerates known as chaebol that often act above the law.

The lower court had convicted Cho of forcing a flight to change its route, obstructing the flight’s captain in the performance of his duties, forcing a crew member off a plane and assaulting a crew member.

It found her not guilty of interfering with a transport ministry investigation into the incident.

Cho pleaded not guilty and prosecutors had called for three years in prison.

The aviation security law is meant to regulate highly dangerous acts such as hijacking. But the upper court said today that there wasn’t a big safety threat posed by Cho’s actions, and returning the plane that was taxiing did not constitute forcing a change in the plane’s route.

Kim Sang-hwan, head of the three judge upper court panel, said that even though Cho used violence against crew members, she should be given a second chance. The judge also cited her “internal change” since she began serving her prison term as a reason for lessening the sentence.

The upper court also took into consideration that Cho is the mother of two-year-old twins and had never committed any offence before. She has resigned from her position at the airline.

“It appears that she will have to live under heavy criticism from society and stigma,” said Kim.


 
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