A JetBlue passenger says her tweets got her booted from a flight late Tuesday.

Lisa Carter-Knight was on her way home to Boston from Philadelphia when her JetBlue Flight 760 was delayed. She took to Twitter, as many travelers do, to describe what was going on.

“We had been waiting an hour, so there was a joke by another passenger, that it’d been a long night and he hoped there was a fully-stocked bar on the airplane,” Carter-Knight told a local ABC television station. “And the pilot immediately ran out and said, ‘That’s it, everybody back up at the gate. I’ve been accused of being intoxicated.’"

She tweeted about the back and forth between the pilot and passengers who accused the pilot of being drunk. When it finally was time to get back on the plane, Carter-Knight was denied boarding.

Jet Blue just denied me to board the aircraft due to my social media coverage of tonight's events. The pilot and staff denied service to me. — Lisa Carter-Knight (@drinkwaterevent) October 8, 2014

Flight 760 was delayed by four hours Tuesday night, according to flight-tracking website FlightAware.

#JetBlue Major debacle on flight 760 in Philly- pilot accuses passengers of accusing him of being intoxicated demands all passengers back — Lisa Carter-Knight (@drinkwaterevent) October 8, 2014

#philyjetblue760 Passengers falsely accused and ordered back to gate-pilot accuses passenger — Lisa Carter-Knight (@drinkwaterevent) October 8, 2014

#wmur Philly Boston flight 760 grounded due to unruly pilot - false accusations by pilot that his sobriety was questioned by passengers — Lisa Carter-Knight (@drinkwaterevent) October 8, 2014

After being denied boarding, Carter-Knight tweeted about being kept away from her three children. In a statement Wednesday provided to Mashable, JetBlue confirmed the delayed flight:

On Tuesday, October 7, 2014, Flt 760 from Philadelphia International Airport (PHL) to Boston Logan International Airport (BOS), experienced a delay prior to departure due to a customer's accusation of a pilot being intoxicated. As a precautionary measure, a sobriety test was conducted. The test demonstrated the pilot was sober and as a result, he was cleared to perform his duties. Customers boarded the aircraft which departed PHL at 12:03am and arrived in BOS at 1:12am.

UPDATE: Oct. 8, 1:27 p.m. A JetBlue spokesperson sent Mashable the following statement:

It is not our practice to remove a customer for expressing criticism of their experience in any medium. We will remove a customer if they are disruptive and the crew evaluates that there is a risk of escalation which could lead to an unsafe environment. The decision to remove a customer from a flight is not taken lightly. If we feel a customer is not complying with safety instructions, exhibits objectionable behavior or causes conflict at the gate or on the aircraft, the customer will be asked to deplane or will be denied boarding especially if the crew feels the situation runs the risk of accelerating in the air.

The spokesperson said Carter-Knight was not kicked off because of her tweets.

"There were other customers that also tweeted and boarded the plane," the spokesperson added. "This customer however was denied boarding due to unruly behavior and creating a disturbance by the gate area."

According to the local ABC station, Carter-Knight returned to the airport Wednesday morning for a flight home on a different carrier. She received a refund from JetBlue.