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A $10,000 lesson in airline policies

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March 30, 2008|Jane Engle, Times Staff Writer

This is a story about two retirees who bought $753 round-trip tickets to Europe and wound up paying nearly $10,000.

It's also a story about self-serving airline policies, regulatory indifference and the perils of booking separate tickets for connecting flights.


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If it doesn't make your blood boil, consult a cardiologist.

Anthony and Carol Lopilato of Redondo Beach booked their bargain fares from New York's JFK Airport to Rome, flying out Dec. 19 and back Jan. 2, on Alitalia. Then, they booked an American Airlines flight from LAX scheduled to arrive at JFK more than three hours before their Alitalia flight.

It didn't.

The flight was delayed by "equipment issues," American spokesman Tim Smith said. The jet pulled into JFK too late for the Lopilatos to make their Alitalia flight.

At first, the couple said, American tried to help. Its staff reserved seats for them on its own flight to London that night and then on to Italy on British Airways, all for free. But shortly before takeoff, the Lopilatos said, the staff said they had no seats and instead offered to put them up at a hotel, with no guarantee that they would get on a flight the next day.

When the Lopilatos asked what happened to the seats American had booked for them, they said they were offered one-way tickets -- for $2,065 each, the walk-up fare.

Worried about missing their group tour in Italy, the couple ponied up. When they arrived in Italy, they learned that Alitalia had canceled their return booking because they had missed the outbound flight. So they paid American more than $2,000 each for tickets back to the U.S.

"I was livid," Carol says.

American's explanation? Smith said the carrier withdrew its offer of free seats because Alitalia's ticket counter had closed, and so Alitalia could not endorse over the Lopilatos' tickets, which would ensure that American would be reimbursed.

In an e-mail to the Lopilatos denying their request for more than $8,000 in ticket refunds, Barbara J. Russell of American's customer relations department wrote, "You see, it's not our intent to provide free travel."

Russell suggested the couple turn to Alitalia for refunds. But in an e-mail to me, Alitalia spokesman Simone Cantagallo said that when customers miss a flight without advance notice and "due to circumstances not caused by Alitalia, the airline is not liable for reimbursement of . . . nonrefundable tickets," such as the Lopilatos bought.

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