Man Who Faked Being Flight Attendant Booked 120 Free Flights

By Jessie Stone • Jun 25, 2025
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It sounds like something out of a low-budget caper film — a man boards dozens of planes, breezes past security, and flies across the country for free.

But this wasn't Hollywood. It was Florida. And now, it's a federal case.

The 6-Year Scam That Flew Under the Radar

From 2018 to 2024, 35-year-old Tiron Alexander managed to book more than 120 flights using credentials he didn't actually have. He took 34 of those flights for free. According to court documents and a release by the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Florida, Alexander falsely claimed to be a flight attendant on multiple airlines and got away with it for years.

The setup was both simple and bold. Alexander used an airline's internal web portal — reserved for actual crew members — to book flights that were available exclusively to pilots and flight attendants. The form asked for standard details such as badge numbers, dates of hire, airline affiliation.

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Authorities said Alexander listed employment with seven different airlines, supplied 30 unique badge numbers, and used varying hire dates to complete the ruse.

A Patchwork of Lies Across States and Airlines

He didn't just reuse one airline's name over and over. Alexander impersonated flight attendants from at least three different carriers, and the flight bookings appear to have been made through at least two airlines, one based in Miramar, Florida (widely believed to be Spirit Airlines), and another in Dallas, Texas. Though those companies have not been publicly confirmed by prosecutors, screenshots of Alexander's bookings suggest Spirit was a key player in the fraud. Spirit Airlines declined to comment on the case.

His real aviation background? Limited. Alexander had worked in the airline industry in the past, most recently as a flight attendant for Republic Airways in 2015 and, before that, a flight attendant for Atlantic Southeast Airlines and in ticketing support for Delta. However, he hadn't held a flight-related position for nearly a decade.

The Verdict and What Comes Next

On June 5, a federal jury convicted him of wire fraud and unlawfully entering secure areas of airports under false pretenses. The guilty verdict was announced publicly by the U.S. Attorney's Office and the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), which had investigated the case. TSA emphasized that although Alexander used fraudulent credentials to board, he underwent standard TSA screening at security checkpoints and didn't pose a direct threat to fellow passengers.

Alexander is now awaiting sentencing and could face up to 20 years in prison for wire fraud and an additional 10 years for entering secure areas illegally.

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How Did No One Catch Him Sooner?

It's a question many are asking. How could someone repeatedly book crew-only flights over such a long stretch of time without raising red flags?

While his scheme didn't compromise aircraft safety, it did spotlight glaring vulnerabilities in airline verification systems, especially for programs that extend perks or privileges to crew.

For now, Alexander sits convicted, his long run of free travel officially over.

References: Man Who Got 120 Free Flights by Posing as Flight Attendant Found Guilty of Fraud: Authorities | Florida Man Scams His Way to Over 120 Free Flights by Posing as Flight Attendant | A 35-Year-Old Florida Man Booked More Than 120 Free Flights by Posing as a Flight Attendant

The Truthfully team was assisted by generative AI technology in creating this content
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