Osteen’s wife
denies assaulting flight attendant
VICTORIA and JOEL
OSTEEN
The wife of
megachurch evangelist Joel Osteen told jurors Friday she was
"dumbfounded" and "shook up" after a flight attendant
accused her of assaulting her over a spill on a first-class
seat. Victoria Osteen, in court because the flight attendant
is suing her, said she pushed no one and even ended up
cleaning the spill that sparked the incident herself.
Continental
Airlines flight attendant Sharon Brown claims Victoria
Osteen grabbed, elbowed and pushed her before the start of a
2005 flight to Vail, Colo. Victoria Osteen and her husband,
who also had been on board and testified earlier Friday,
denied that account.
"I love people. I’m
guilty of that," Victoria Osteen said.
Dressed in an
orange pant-suit, Victoria Osteen was animated while
testifying, often moving her hands while she talked. A
couple of times during her testimony, she cried.
Joel Osteen called
the incident "an unfortunate misunderstanding." He testified
that his wife never raised her voice or grabbed the flight
attendants, though he said he could not hear his wife’s
voice from his seat.
"We would never
disrespect authority or disrespect the flight attendant,"
Joel Osteen said.
The couple are
co-pastors of Houston’s Lakewood Church, a converted
basketball arena that draws about 42,000 people each week
for services. Joel Osteen’s weekly television address is
broadcast nationally and internationally and he has written
books that have been sold around the globe.
On Thursday,
another flight attendant on the plane, Maria Johnson,
testified that Victoria Osteen demanded special attention to
clean up a half-dollar-sized spill on her armrest.
When Victoria
Osteen didn’t get her way, Johnson testified, the passenger
became verbally and physically abusive to both flight
attendants. She said Osteen eventually grabbed Brown by the
shoulders, elbowed her in the chest and pushed her out of
the way in an attempt to get into the cockpit.
But both Joel and
Victoria Osteen, who were called to the witness stand by
Brown’s attorney, disputed Johnson’s testimony.
Victoria Osteen
said when she first told a flight attendant about the spill,
she was handed some napkins. She said she responded, "‘It’s
not my job.’ I didn’t say it in an ugly tone of voice."
Victoria Osteen
denied Johnson’s claim that she later grabbed Johnson and
pulled her in order to have her see the spill.
Victoria Osteen
said she tends to talk with her hands. She said that when
she was talking with Brown, she was holding her sunglasses
but did not point them at the flight attendant.
Victoria Osteen
told jurors that Brown’s response was to fling her hands at
her and accuse her of pointing and pushing the flight
attendant.
"It freaked me out.
I asked a simple question," she said.
Brown claims in her
lawsuit that after pushing her, Victoria Osteen tried to get
into the cockpit. Victoria Osteen denied that, telling
jurors she just wanted to get away from the situation.
"I was already
freaked out because she was accusing me of stuff I didn’t
do," she said. "I was dumbfounded."
Victoria Osteen
said she told Brown, "If I’ve done something to offend you,
I’m sorry," then got some napkins and went back and cleaned
up the spill.
Reginald McKamie,
Brown’s attorney, asked Joel Osteen why he said in one of
his religious messages that if it wasn’t for him, his wife
would be in prison.
Osteen said he
meant it to be a comical statement about the differences
between him and his wife, that he likes routine and
considers himself boring while his wife is outgoing and
likes to go to new restaurants and new places.
"You don’t go to
jail because you like different restaurants, do you?"
Mc-Kamie asked, as the packed courtroom laughed.
"No sir," Joel
Osteen said.
Brown has claimed
the flight attendants asked to have Victoria Osteen removed
from the plane, but Joel and Victoria Osteen testified they
left voluntarily.
The Federal
Aviation Administration fined Victoria Osteen $3,000 for
interfering with a crew member.
The Osteens said
they did not want to pay the fine but thought it would be
the best way to put the incident behind them even though
they felt Victoria Osteen did nothing wrong.
Brown wants an
apology and punitive damages amounting to 10 percent of
Victoria Osteen’s net worth as part of her lawsuit. Brown
claims she suffers from depression and post-traumatic stress
disorder because of the incident and that her faith has been
affected. She is also suing for counseling expenses.
Rusty Hardin,
Victoria Osteen’s attorney, says there is no evidence Brown
sustained any injuries.
The trial
continues.