1 Jetstar Passenger Unleashes at the Airline over His $3,000 Nightmare
sybilk26151760 edited this page 3 weeks ago


A Jetstar traveler has actually had over $3,000 worth of items stolen from him after taking the wrong travel suitcase home from Brisbane Airport.
cycologyclothing.com
Brady Watson, 25, flew home from Melbourne at the end of March following a work journey and accidentally got the incorrect bag at the baggage carousel.
motoradds.com
After understanding his error and immediately returning the similar-looking travel luggage to the airport, months later on he still hasn't had his bag returned to him.

He revealed he is 'out of all of the clothes that I purchased when I moved' to Brisbane.

Mr Watson was told the other passenger, whose bag he had misinterpreted for his own, hadn't taken his luggage, however yet his luggage couldn't be located.

Jetstar 'make the process of you getting your bag back or settlement as difficult as possible so eventually you quit,' he claimed on TikTok.

'They desired a cops report so they could conclude whether it was stolen off the conveyor belt since if it was stolen then, technically, it is not their duty,' he discussed.

'Like how do you have no footage what so ever of someone walking with my bag,' he fumed. 'Shouldn't airports be heavily surveilled?'

@bradyywatsonn I hate you Jetstar #jetstar #fyp #lostbaggage

♬ original sound - Brady

Jetstar and Brisbane Airport informed Mr Watson they believe the bag was taken and it is a matter for the cops.

But he said he received correspondence from Queensland Police to state they could not confirm one way or the other whether the bag had actually been stolen or not.

Mr Watson stated he's been left exceptionally annoyed over having to go backward and forward with Jetstar over the previous few months, while still having no idea where his suitcase is.

A Jetstar spokesperson told Daily Mail Australia: 'We acknowledge this has been an actually aggravating and troublesome experience for Mr Watson and our customer support group has actually done whatever they can to help him.

'We can validate we flew Mr Watson's bag from Melbourne to Brisbane and made it available for collection at the baggage carousel following his flight.

'On the day, Mr Watson erroneously collected the incorrect bag. After his bag could not be found, Jetstar comprehends airport CCTV revealed his bag had been taken by somebody else and a cops investigation was released.'

The spokesperson stated that 'in spite of everybody's best shots' the bag has not lain.

Brady Watson (imagined) claimed he will never ever fly Jetstar once again after he was informed his suitcase had been stolen following a flight from Melbourne to Brisbane and could not lie

A Jetstar representative said 'airport CCTV showed [Mr Watson's] bag had been taken by another person and a cops examination was launched'

'We understand this is an extremely disappointing result and our team wants to provide any more assistance we can to the police examination,' they added.

Many audiences on the video took the traveller's side and offered their 2 cents on Jetstar.

'Forget the bag, they got me stranded overseas for 5 days,' one stated.

'I had dreadful experiences with them and now Qantas is becoming just as bad,' claimed another.

'Brady, I've seen this as I will head to Melbourne on a Jetstar flight. I'm terrified,' added a 3rd.

However, others mentioned he had made the mistake in the first location.

'Lol you took the incorrect bag and it probs got stolen, blaming someone else,' said one.

'Have you become aware of AirTags?' included anther.

'Jetstar didn't lose your things ... the ground dealing with business did' said a third.

'Every airline loses bags ... You stole another person's bag ... If you're to make that mistake, the airline can have a free mistake too. Fair is fair,' another stated.

Mr Watson argued that he fixed his error however Jetstar had not.

In a statement, Brisbane Airport stated both Jetstar and airport personnel 'have made comprehensive efforts to find the missing bag reported by the traveler'.

'Despite reviewing video from multiple CCTV cams, it has actually not been possible to determine who took the bag, and this is now a matter for cops,' the declaration checked out.

'Incidents like this are incredibly uncommon, and we understand how stressful it would be for the traveler included.

'We 'd like to take this opportunity to advise all visitors to carefully examine that they have collected the proper baggage before leaving the luggage carousel area.'

Daily Mail Australia got in touch with Queensland Police for comment.

MelbourneTikTokJetstar