Originally Posted by
Peter_Ng
Last year I had a situation like this, me and my wife were suppose to fly from SNA-SEA as a same-day MR so my wife can get AA Gold. Departure date came, she had an important meeting that day and couldn't fly with me. I checked both of us in . Waiting for the plane to depart, I thought why didn;t I used her boarding pass to get to the plane and she got the mile credited to her account. I decided not to do that. My theoretical question is had I did that, assuming the GA didn't really care and with our names, it's kind of hard to tell from male or female, would my wife get the miles right, because according to the boarding manifest, she was the one that flying and I was not.
You probably would have been fine. If the GA noticed a gender mismatch with the first name and said something, you could have just said, "Ooops! I grabbed the wrong one. My wife was supposed to be on this trip, but she had a last-minute crisis at work." Then dig around in your carryon and find your real BP to hand her.
Originally Posted by
DaddyRabbit
Do not do this. The do-not-fly list likely matches names and FF numbers. You could be in real trouble and the relative may not be permitted to fly.
Are you serious?!? Why on earth would FFN be on the no-fly list?
A) TSA shouldn't have access to that info
B) You are not required to use a FFN to fly
C) Which FFN would they use? Surely you have more than one?
D) The point of the no-fly list is that you aren't allowed to fly frequently.
Idiocy like this is exactly why TSA runs roughshod over people at checkpoints. It's even not Constitutional for the TSA to force you to show ID to travel - that was settled in Gilmore vs. Gonzalez. Why on earth would you think TSA had any power or authority to scrutinize or verify your frequent flyer number?
Any violations of frequent flyer accounts are strictly between you and the airline, and punishments are limited to seizure of your miles and account, and in extreme cases, being banned from flying the airline. Perhaps you would be open to a civil fraud lawsuit.