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"Slow Learners Abound In Airport Security Lines"


 
Tuesday, November 23, 2004

Don't bring guns (or chain saws) to the airport
The Associated Press


WASHINGTON (AP) - Is it possible the word still hasn't gotten around? Leave
your handguns and knives at home when you go to the airport. The chain saw,
land mines and gunpowder, too. 

More than three years after the Sept. 11 attacks, air travelers still are
trying to carry thousands of potentially deadly items on planes every month.


The Transportation Security Administration, which took over security
screening at 450 airports in February 2002, said Tuesday it had confiscated
15.6 million prohibited items, including 2,150 guns, 75,241 boxcutters and
4.7 million knives through the end of October. 

A 79-year-old woman was arrested Tuesday at Fort Lauderdale International
Airport in Florida after screeners found a single-shot Colt Derringer and
seven bullets in her tote bag. She said she forgot it was in the bag, which
she tried to carry on the plane, according to the Broward County sheriff's
office. 

Billie Vincent, former security chief for the Federal Aviation
Administration, blames stupidity and forgetfulness in most cases. 

"How do you deal with people who have to know about 9/11 and, even
inadvertently, are still trying to get knives onto planes?" he asked. 

Vincent said a prominent Washington lawyer once failed to realize he had his
set of compact, mechanical tools in the briefcase he was trying to bring on
board. 

"It isn't restricted to the farmer or the doofus," Vincent said. 

In October alone, screeners seized ammunition 2,000 times, along with
170,940 knives and 73 guns. 

TSA spokeswoman Amy von Walter said local law enforcement officials have
arrested people caught with prohibited items in some cases. It's up to local
prosecutors to decide on criminal charges, she said. 

A college student who hid bags of boxcutters and fake bombs in the
lavatories of four Southwest Airlines jets last year pleaded guilty to a
misdemeanor as part of a plea bargain with prosecutors. 

The student, Nathaniel Heatwole, said he was trying to expose what he called
gaps in aviation security. By taking a dangerous weapon aboard an aircraft,
he could have been charged with a federal felony that carries a possible
10-year prison sentence. 

Oregon Rep. Peter DeFazio, ranking Democrat on the House aviation
subcommittee, said most of the seized items are trivial. 

"Primarily nail files and small knives and scissors - mostly innocent
things," said DeFazio, who has lost several pairs of mustache scissors to
the TSA. 

Some have not been so innocent. 

The TSA has found knives disguised as lipstick, a radio with a handgun
inside, a loaded gun stuffed into a teddy bear. Several people have tried to
bring chain saws onto planes. An Army sergeant was kicked off a flight after
an inert land mine was found in his checked luggage. One man packed
gunpowder and a fuse for his hobby of shooting golf balls out of cannons. 

"You name it, we've seen it," said the TSA's von Walter. 

They haven't found everything, though. 

DeFazio, who has reviewed classified reports on the screeners' performance,
said they have trouble finding artfully concealed objects. 

"They're crippled with machines that only look at items in one dimension and
are very primitive," he said. "They have 1970s technology to find 21st
century threats." 

Better X-ray machines are on the market, DeFazio said, but Congress hasn't
given the TSA enough money to buy new ones. 

Attached Photo:

A paint gun, sword, fake grenade and other potential weapons were displayed
after being confiscated from people attempting to board planes.


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