When Concussion Becomes “Alcoholism”: The Cautionary Tale of Captain Michael Tallon
July 9, 2025
Pilots for HIMS Reform
A federal lawsuit filed this month against United Airlines reads like something out of Kafka: a respected pilot injured on the job, only to be accused of addiction he didn’t have and forced into treatment he didn’t need.
According to the complaint filed in Chicago, Captain Michael Tallon—a 30-year United Airlines veteran and Boeing 737 check airman—was on a layover in the Azores in June 2023 when he slipped on uneven pavement, hit his face, and suffered clear signs of a concussion: slurred speech, confusion, and disorientation.
Instead of arranging prompt medical care for a head injury, United management decided to treat Tallon’s condition as evidence of alcohol misuse. Even though he was forthright—acknowledging he’d had a beer or two with dinner—his co-pilot immediately recognized he was injured, not drunk.
Despite this, Tallon was threatened with termination if he did not “voluntarily” confess to an alcohol problem. He was coerced into inpatient rehabilitation, mandated daily Alcoholics Anonymous meetings, and subjected to frequent breathalyzer tests.
This continued for nearly two years. Only after enduring the stigma and cost of monitoring was he fired—because he refused to “keep up the charade,” as the lawsuit describes it. A second medical opinion, ironically, had already confirmed no substance use disorder. Tallon needed concussion care, not a forced addiction label.
His lawsuit against United claims disability discrimination, citing the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Family and Medical Leave Act. The complaint argues the airline ignored his legitimate medical condition in favor of a predetermined narrative of impairment.
The Bigger Picture: Why This Matters
For pilots across the country, Captain Tallon’s story is not unique. It is the inevitable result of a system where accusations alone can cost a career, where corporate liability fears override science, and where the burden of disproving addiction is placed squarely on the pilot’s shoulders—even in the face of contradictory medical evidence.
We have seen this same pattern inside the FAA’s HIMS program:
- Conflation of medical and behavioral issues.
- Presumption of guilt.
- Punitive treatment and monitoring regimens that can span years.
- Financial exploitation under the guise of “compliance.”
Whether the label is “alcoholic,” “mentally unfit,” or “in denial,” pilots are often forced to accept diagnoses or risk immediate termination. Once a pilot is caught in the machinery of a one-size-fits-all treatment model, there is rarely a way out.
Captain Tallon’s ordeal is a warning that when systems lack transparency and accountability, any pilot can be railroaded—regardless of evidence, character, or professional history.
What Needs to Change
At Pilots for HIMS Reform, we believe that protecting public safety does not require abandoning due process or medical integrity. We advocate for:
- Clear separation between legitimate medical diagnoses and risk-management narratives.
- The right of pilots to obtain independent medical evaluations—and to have those findings respected.
- Real pathways to challenge false or exaggerated impairment claims without retaliation.
- An end to the presumption that any deviation in behavior is proof of addiction or incompetence.
This case underscores why our coalition exists. No pilot should be forced to sacrifice their dignity, livelihood, and health to satisfy institutional fear.
Stand With Us
If you are a pilot, air traffic controller, or aviation professional who has been threatened, coerced, or silenced in a similar process, you are not alone.
Share your story confidentially and learn about our legislative initiatives to protect pilots.