"Munoz said the airline will limit the use of law enforcement to “safety and security issues only.” He also announced that the airline will no longer bump passengers once they have boarded their flight unless it involves a safety or security issue."
Much more of Munoz's mea culpa here:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news...s-went-wrong-that-day/?utm_term=.43426a6b9025
Munoz made it very clear that United owned this issue, and took many of the actions that were discussed by some here.
“Did I believe what law enforcement folks did was wrong? Yeah. But once again, it was I and we who put them in that situation.”
“United Airlines takes full responsibility for what happened,” reads the report’s introduction. “The intention of this report is to communicate concrete and meaningful actions that will avoid putting our customers, employees and partners in impossible situations.” ...
... the airline should not have tried to find space on the flight for crew members at the last minute. It also should have offered more compensation or more transportation options to entice customers to give up their seats voluntarily, but it acknowledged that agents did not have the authority to make such decisions. Finally, the report said the airline has not provided regular training for employees on how to deal with “denied boarding situations.”
“Our review shows that many things went wrong that day, but the headline is clear: Our policies got in the way of our values and procedures interfered in doing what’s right,” Munoz said.