16-year-old flying alone ends up on wrong Frontier Airlines flight

A teenager was supposed to fly from Tampa, Florida to Cleveland, Ohio over holiday break. Instead, the boy ended up in San Juan, Puerto Rico, and the airline apologized.

A teen traveling alone on Frontier Airlines over the holidays ended up on the wrong flight, ending up in San Juan, Puerto Rico when he was trying to get to Cleveland.

Logan Lose, 16, was headed from Tampa International Airport more than 1,000 miles away to Cleveland, Ohio, to visit his mom for the holidays on Dec. 22, WFLA reported. Instead, the boy landed more than 1,200 southeast in San Juan, leaving his parents wanting someone to be held accountable.

"They would’ve known it was the wrong flight if they scanned the boarding pass," father Ryan Lose told the TV station. The Frontier Airlines agent at the gate Logan reportedly checked his baggage, looked at his mobile boarding pass and told him he could get on the plane. 

"Help me please," Logan texted his family once he landed. "I’m so scared. They told me it was Ohio."

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"My first reaction was panic," his father said. "He’s panicking, he’s scared, and I can’t be there to keep him safe."

The teen was reportedly two hours ahead of schedule, and was at the right gate that his flight was supposed to leave from after the one departing to Puerto Rico. 

"He was able to board as a result of an error on the part of the boarding agent," a Frontier Airlines spokeswoman told WFLA. "He was immediately flown back to Tampa on the same aircraft and accommodated on a flight to Cleveland the following day."

The airline told NBC News they extended its sincere apologies to the family for the error. 

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"They kept brushing it off, saying no that’s not possible. That can’t happen," Ryan said. "And when they did finally realize their mistake and said it looks like Logan did get on the other plane, they just said, oh sorry and that was it."

The father added that Frontier offered him a $200 travel voucher following the mishap, but he prefers accountability. 

Frontier Airlines does not have an unaccompanied minor program that escorts young travelers like many other airlines do. Instead, passengers under the age of 15 cannot travel alone. 

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A similar incident took place recently with a much younger traveler. On Dec. 21, an unaccompanied 6-year-old flying Spirit Airlines from Philadelphia to Fort Myers, Florida, was incorrectly put on a flight to Orlando. 

On Friday, Spirit told FOX 35 Orlando, "This agent is no longer working with Spirit, and any individual whose actions resulted in the incorrect boarding will be held accountable for failing to follow our procedures.

Fox Business' Brie Stimson contributed to this report.

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