
Delta Airlines sued after worker allegedly used child’s Peppa Pig iPad to film explicit videos
The family said Delta ignored one report and sent a ‘no reply’ to the next
Delta Airlines has been sued after a worker allegedly used a child’s lost iPad, decorated with a Peppa Pig case, to film sexually explicit videos of himself. The footage later appeared in the family’s iCloud account, according to the legal complaint.
Tory and Brooke Brewer, from South Carolina, said their child left the iPad behind during a Delta flight from Charleston to New York City’s JFK Airport in July 2023. The family were on their way to London for a holiday. They only realised the device was missing after landing.
Weeks later, the child’s mother started receiving odd notifications. She used Apple’s ‘Find My’ app and saw the iPad was still in New York. Soon after, photos and videos, including explicit content, began syncing to the family’s iCloud.
According to the lawsuit, the man who took the iPad logged out of the family’s account. However, the photos and videos were still being uploaded. One video, taken a month later, showed a man masturbating while wearing what appeared to be a Delta uniform with a name badge visible. Another explicit video followed shortly after.
The lawsuit also claims the man accessed the family’s iTunes account. He created a new profile and used the device to get into their Amazon account.

via District Court for the District of South Carolina
Lawsuit claims that Delta failed to act
The Brewers said they filed two reports with Delta after discovering the iPad was missing and unusual activity began to appear. They claimed the airline did not respond to the first report. Delta only sent a generic, “no reply” email after the second, stating it was still searching for the device.
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“What should have been a fun family getaway was riddled with confusion and anxiety over unauthorised access to their personal devices,” said their lawyer, Tola Familoni of Motley Rice. “This was a breach of privacy and exposure to highly inappropriate, explicit recordings, through their child’s device, something they never would have expected.”
The lawsuit accuses Delta of negligence, emotional distress, and harassment.
Worker was employed by Delta’s vendor
Delta confirmed the individual involved was not a Delta employee. He worked for Unifi Aviation, a vendor company contracted by the airline. The man has not been publicly named.
In a statement to Metro, Delta said, “Delta is aware of the complaint. The accused individual is not a Delta employee but one of a vendor company. We have zero tolerance for unlawful behaviour of any kind but will decline to comment further on this pending litigation.”
Also, a Unifi Spokesperson said, “Unifi is aware of the complaint. Unifi holds all employees to high standards of professionalism and integrity, and any conduct that falls short of those standards is not tolerated.”
The Brewers’ lawyer said they hoped Delta would take responsibility and speak directly to the family. He added that the airline “unfortunately didn’t do that.” “We hope this lawsuit helps prevent something like this from happening to other families,” he said.
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