
Won her case: Shoshana Hebshi, of
Sylvania, Ohio, who was strip-searched at a Detroit-area airport, will
gain $40,000 as compensation for being humiliated

Yoga instructor: Hebshi works as a freelance writer, yoga instructor, and is a mother to two twins
Hebshi, who has a Jewish mother and Saudi Arabian father, has said she was ethnically profiled based on her dark complexion.
'I
filed this lawsuit because I didn't want others to experience the kind
of unnecessary trauma that I did, and it has given me faith that the
justice system can work to protect constitutional rights,' Hebshi said
in a release.
'This settlement gives me some peace of mind. Now, I feel like I can finally put the incident behind me.'
Hebshi
of Sylvania, Ohio, was traveling home after visiting a sister in
California when was removed from the Frontier Airlines flight after it
landed Sept. 11, 2011.
She was seated next to two Indian-American men, whom crew members had said spent a lot of time in the plane's bathroom.
All three were detained, according to the ACLU. Hebshi was held for hours before being released. The two men also were released.
'People do not forfeit their constitutional rights when they step onto an airplane,' said ACLU attorney Rachel Goodman.

Traveler: Hebshi, pictured with her
family at Stonehenge in England, was traveling on the 10th anniversary
of 9/11 when she was ethnically profiled

Ethnically profiled: Shoshana Hebshi, a
woman of Arab and Jewish descent was strip-searched at Detroit
Metropolitan Airport on the 10th anniversary on 9/11
'This
settlement sends that critical message, and will help protect future
passengers from having to endure what Shoshana went through.'
The
Airport Authority said its insurer agreed to a financial settlement to
avoid 'further time-consuming and costly litigation.' That amount was
not released.
Airport
police 'acted quickly and responsibly, and followed appropriate
protocols in responding to a request for help from one of our airline
partners,' Authority Chief Executive Thomas Naughton said in a release.
'I strongly support their actions. We remain committed to vigilantly protecting the safety of the travelling public.'
As
part of the settlement, Frontier will amend its employee handbook to
more clearly state its zero-tolerance policy on discrimination and
provide all new employees with training on that revision. The airline
also will amend its customer complaint policy to ensure allegations of
discrimination are given appropriate attention.
Frontier Airlines declined to comment on the settlement.
According to Hebshi's Twiiter, she is a mother of twin boys and works as a yoga instructor and freelance writer.

Human right's advocate: 'I filed this
lawsuit because I didn't want others to experience the kind of
unnecessary trauma that I did,' Hebshi said in a release
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