Guy chronically complains for the purpose of getting freebies out of the airline. This sticks out like a sore thumb in computerized data mining. Airline deals with the situation.
Good riddance.
Yarg, i remember these folks when i worked over the phone customer service.
They know that 99% of the time it is much more time efficient to give them the dollar they are complaining about than spend literal hours debating their interpretation of the company policy. To combat this, one company i worked for made an automated customer service line, the person typed in their kind of issue , were told that it was reviewed ( it wasn't) and got anything they asked for up to 5 dollars.
Worked for a while, until the complainers figured this out, so then they would call in every month, get the 5 dollars, then call into the customer service center and make up a complaint to get more free things.
My favored position in the company was sup when they finally started flagging people's accounts. And literally sending them directly to me, as , not to toot my own horn, but despite being polite without being condescending, people knew they wern't getting away with anything once they heard my voice, and reasoning.
Very few things were more satisfying than flagging someone's account with " No credit without approval of ** my name here** ". One of those being the dozen or so times that someone said " Listen this is ridiculous, i know i was just taking advantage before, but now i have a real issue. " , oh the anger that took place when i said ( Not specific , but rather an overview of what the resolution was in these cases.) " Okay, well we did overcharge you 100 dollars by accident this month, very sorry about that. Balancing this out with the 120 dollars in credit you admit you got without reason, that will be a 20 dollar charge on next month's bill. Is there anything else i can help you with?"
Then the pure bile that came out of them when they realized that after X number of calls they came right to me, no other choice than to send in a letter. And while the company in question was great at solving real issues, they took a dim view of people who got anywhere from 100 to 300 dollars worth of credits for no reason a year ( some of these knobs literally paid 10 dollars a month or slightly less for service when all was said and done.).