A BASILDON businessman boarded the wrong flight home and landed in Las Vegas - even though he claims airline staff checked his boarding pass THREE times.

Finance broker Samuel Jankowsky, 29, was supposed to be flying back to Stansted after meetings in Cologne, Germany.

It was only after an hour-long power nap that he spotted the Eurowings aircraft had flown past the UK on the journey-tracker on the entertainment system.

He then frantically sent a message on Whatsapp to his pregnant wife using the on-board wifi before landing 8,500 miles away in Las Vegas.

But he claims when he landed he was treated as “a common criminal” by US immigration officials who he said threatened to detain him for not having a visa.

He eventually flew back to Cologne - but claims he was banned by Eurowings so had to travel to Stuttgart airport for a flight home.

Samuel, who by then had travelled 17,000 miles, said: “When I got on the plane I did think it was a big plane for a short flight, but I didn’t worry about it.

“I put on my headphones and went to sleep.

“When I woke up I saw that we had passed the UK.

“I asked the person next to me what was going on and he said: ‘We’re flying to Vegas’.

“I said: ‘Can we turn the plane around?’ “I didn’t even know Eurowings flew to Las Vegas.”

The dad of Aston, six, and Thalia, one, said adding to his distress was the fact that his wife Monique, 25, was waiting for him at Stansted and was seven months pregnant.

He said: “I paid 12 euros so I could get wifi and Whatsapp my wife to explain. She was distraught and called Eurowings to complain.”

At McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas, Samuel said he was treated as “a common criminal” by US immigration officials who threatened to detain him.

He said: “I was treated like a person who tried to enter the US without a visa.

“The official said we had an hour to do the paperwork to put me on a flight back to Cologne.

“If I missed the flight, I’d be detained until Tuesday when there was another Eurowings flight.

“I had a boarding pass for London Stansted which cost around 120 euros.

“They seemed to think I had sneaked onto the plane to get a flight to Vegas on the cheap.

“They even put me in a little cell and completely searched me. I was supervised the whole time I was there.”

Samuel has hit out at the airline for allowing him to board the wrong flight and for failing to treat him well on the flight back to Cologne.

He said: “On the flight back I wasn’t treated at all well by the cabin crew. I didn’t want to be there anymore than they wanted me there.

“The crew were professional but they treated me like they had a criminal on the plane, maybe a serial killer. It was like I was in the film Con Air.

“The whole experience not only cost me time but also I am 878 euros out of pocket for the food, hotel and flight home.

“How could I have boarded the aircraft without a valid boarding pass for that flight? Staff checked my boarding pass three times. It shows the ineptitude of Eurowings staff.

“Heaven forbid my intentions were not good. This is a major security failing.”

Samuel explained that his journey continued back in Cologne when he was unable to get a flight back to Stansted - because Eurowings banned him from their airline.

He added: “In the end, I took a train to Mannheim in Germany and stayed with a friend while I looked for an affordable flight.

“I found one from Stuttgart airport so I had a two and a half hour bus ride from Mannheim to the airport.”

Samuel arrived at Stansted on July 2 - two days later than his intended arrival date.

Cologne is just 308 miles away from London - but he said he can see the funny side now.

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AIRLINE Eurowings has said the incident was fully investigated by its internal team.
Samuel Jankowsky said he had his boarding pass checked three times by crew, but at no point did they notice he had got on the wrong flight, despite the destination clearly not matching the plane he got on.
He called it a serious safety issue and said it was lucky his intentions were good or it could have been a very different story.
He slammed the “ineptitude” of the crew who checked his ticket three times.
A spokesman for Eurowings said: “We are aware of this case.
“This happened several weeks ago and has already been resolved. 
“The passenger had passed through passenger control and the identification documents had been properly checked by the Federal Police.
“Due to an error by a service provider’s employee, the passenger managed to board the long-haul flight.
“According to the authorities and Eurowings, at no time was there any safety risk.
“Nevertheless, the incident has been thoroughly investigated in-house.
“Eurowings conducted in-depth discussions with the service provider, in addition to requesting strict compliance with our quality standards.”
Eurowings GmbH is a German airline based in Düsseldorf and a fully owned subsidiary of the Lufthansa Group.
It flies to 79 destinations, including Newcastle, Oslo, Venice, Namibia, and Seattle, and operates 60 planes.