An Illinois resident has filed a lawsuit against American Airlines, alleging that the airline’s online check-in system was inaccessible to travelers with disabilities during a trip from Paris to Chicago. Kelsey Brickl, who has severe cardiac and neuromuscular impairments and uses a powered wheelchair, is seeking up to $216,000 in damages.
According to the complaint filed in Chicago district court earlier this week, Brickl attempted to check in online for her flight from Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport to Chicago O'Hare International Airport on June 12. She was traveling with her husband and son, who has autism. The online system presented incorrect titles for her travel party and required them to check in at the airport instead.
Brickl contacted American Airlines’ customer service but was told that online check-in is not always available for international departures. The lawsuit claims this led to additional burdens for Brickl and her family: "physical and physiological burden and fatigue, time compression and disruption of medical routines, and risk to pre-arranged disability accommodations."