A flight attendant is looking for a new job after flying the friendly skies from Chicago to South Bend, Indiana, while allegedly drunk.

Julianne March, 49, was charged Thursday with public intoxication, a misdemeanor, by St. Joseph County authorities in Indiana, according to charging documents.

On Aug. 2, passengers onboard the United Airlines-owned Air Wisconsin flight noticed March acting oddly, charging documents say. Some passengers thought she was drunk, while others worried she was having a medical issue or even a stroke. Passengers later told authorities that March’s condition left them feeling “scared for their lives.”

Aaron Scherb, a passenger on the flight who tweeted about the incident, wrote that March could not make it through the security announcement and seemed unable to stand or walk without stumbling.

Hey @united, our flight attendant appears to be quite drunk on this from from ORD to SBN. She is slurring her speech (she couldn’t make it through the security announcement), couldn’t walk straight/was bumping into everyone in the aisle, and kept dropping things. — Aaron Scherb (@aaronscherb) August 2, 2019

When the plane finally landed in South Bend, St. Joseph County Airport Authority officers boarded the plane and found March sitting down, charging documents say. She started crying and at first refused to stand. Officers asked her where she thought she was, and March allegedly answered, “Chicago.” When she did, March needed to hold on to a seat to steady herself.

Officers observed March’s bloodshot eyes, slurred speech, poor balance and the smell of alcohol on her breath, charging documents say. They did not believe she had a medical emergency. After verbally agreeing to and later refusing a breathalyzer test, March was transported to St. Joseph County Jail. On the way, she told the transporting officer than she had taken two vodka “shooters” before going to work that morning.

March later consented to a breathalyzer test, and her blood-alcohol reading was 0.204. She was released on Aug. 3, and charged with a misdemeanor Thursday.

Air Wisconsin confirmed March has been fired, and a spokesperson for the company said it will continue to cooperate with local authorities and assist them as necessary.

March’s next court hearing is scheduled for Aug. 28.