


The judge wasn't bound by that recommendation. He was charged in Maryland because it was one of the states that the aircraft passed over that day.įederal prosecutors agreed to recommend a sentence of probation without requiring Haak to register as a sex offender. Haak was charged in April with intentionally committing a lewd, indecent or obscene act in a public place, a misdemeanor punishable by a maximum of 90 days in jail. 'She had a right not to be subjected to this kind of behavior, regardless of what may have motivated it or prompted it,' the prosecutor said. 'This is not the kind of aberrant behavior that anyone should accept,' the prosecutor added.Ĭunningham said the first officer 'unfortunately suffered some consequences' as a result of the incident that Haak 'didn't have anything to do with,' but he didn't elaborate. Haak was in the cockpit commanding a Southwest Airlines flight from Philadelphia to Orlando on August 10 when he exposed his genitals to a female first officer (file photo) Haak 'had a duty to comport himself in a much more responsible manner,' Assistant U.S. The judge told Haak that his actions had a traumatic effect on the co-pilot and could have impacted the safety of passengers and other co-workers. The first officer submitted a statement to the court but didn't speak during Friday's hearing.

'As the plane continued its flight, Haak further engaged in inappropriate conduct in the cockpit, as the first officer continued to perform her duties as an assigned aircrew member,' the statement says. After the plane reached its cruising altitude, Haak got out of the pilot's seat, 'disrobed' and began watching pornographic material on a laptop computer in the cockpit, prosecutors said. Michael Haak pled guilty having been charged in federal court with lewd, indecent or an obscene act which was 'a prank' (file photo)įederal prosecutors said that Haak had never met the first officer before that flight bound for Orlando on August 10, 2020.
