TSA admits to punishing travelers

by Charlie Leocha on August 24, 2010


The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) has been a lightning rod for abusive and intrusive security checks since 9/11 — mainly because this is the “security” organization that much of the American public sees perhaps even more than the local police. TSA, unfortunately, also resorts to prevarication in the name of security.

I woke up to a headline on Sunday morning that announced that TSA in Boston and Las Vegas was conducting full “enhanced” open-handed, police search level pat-downs of passengers.

The Boston Herald reports that Transportation Security Administration screeners at Logan International Airport are testing what one official called an “enhanced pat-down.” It lets screeners use a palms-forward, slide-down search procedure on passengers’ bodies.

It replaces the old back-of-the-hand pat-down for passengers who don’t want to go through full-body scanning machines.

Hidden from the public, this enhanced pat-down has been tested for some time now with the nationwide rollout of whole-body scanners. Christopher Elliott first reported this “enhanced” pat-down when passengers complained to the Consumer Travel Alliance.

The passenger, quoted in his column, noted, “The pat-down was completely thorough, as though I was a common criminal or a drug pusher,” she said. “The only place I was not touched was in my crotch — and isn’t that the one place they should be checking, after the underwear bomber?”

TSA officials commenting for the article, “added that checkpoint requirements for passengers departing from the United States haven’t changed since the underwear bomber incident last December.” That suggested pat-downs were still the same as they had always been.

However, when meeting with privacy officials at the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and TSA later that month, I was told unofficially that there were two standards of pat-downs. One for the normal situation where passengers are going through metal detectors and a different pat-down for those who refuse to go through the whole-body scanners.

With this latest announcement, TSA admits that it has been clandestinely punishing passengers for refusing to go through the invasive whole-body scans with an even more intrusive aggressive pat-down and that soon those more invasive pat-down will creep from airport to airport.

Last May, Elliott concluded his article with, “I believe the TSA when it says that it has no formal policy of punishing passengers who don’t want to go through the full-body scanners.” I’m sure he won’t be taking TSA at their word in the future. And that’s a shame when we cannot trust our own government.

In another egregious act of prevarication TSA after claiming whole-body scanners were manufactured so that it would be impossible to store images of the passengers walking through airport security, has been forced to admit that indeed the machines can be programmed to capture and store images.

TSA was forced to admit the truth after the same whole-body scanners used in courthouses have amassed “more than 35,000 whole body imaging scans taken at a federal courthouse.”

I have already commented on this issue in a column earlier this month. Once again, TSA is caught in a lie. Once again, TSA claims that security trumps the truth. Afterall, we need to keep those damned pesky terrorists at bay.

Each time, we turn around TSA and DHS are introducing a new surveillance and search technique.

Before we even come to the airport our names, birthdates, credit cards and passports are run through a terrorist checklist. (I’ll bet they are also run through some other sort of criminal database.) We have our IDs carefully checked with some sort of magical ultraviolet light. Then we are led through stanchions to be videotaped, photographed, wanded, scanned, x-rayed, patted-down, parted from our children, herded through metal detectors, tested for explosives and interrogated. Our computers, cellphones, shoes, clothing, paperwork, briefcases, purses and luggage are x-rayed and pawed through whether we carry them on or check them with the airline.

When a friendly TSA officer next commands us to bend over while the inspector puts on rubber gloves and soothingly lilts, “This won’t hurt a bit,” I’m not ready to believe him. We’re reaching that bend-over point.

One last kinda fib: TSA is not a law enforcement agency; they only want you to think they are. Though the “officers” wear pretty blue shirts, have walkie-talkies, big patches and shiny badges, they have no law enforcement authority. The documentary, Please Remove your Shoes, makes note of this. This fact hasn’t been sitting well with real law enforcement types, but TSA evidently needs to maintain this kind of deceitful appearance in an attempt to command respect.

The attire aims to convey an image of authority to passengers, who have harassed, pushed and in a few instances punched screeners. “Some of our officers aren’t respected,” TSA spokeswoman Ellen Howe said.

Now, I sure believe that!

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  • don

    Lovers of TSA would have loved Nazi Germany, too bad you missed out.

  • martin

    My wife flew out of Boston Logan this morning and asked for the pat down instead of going through the scanner. She was told to walk through the scanner to get to the pat down area…and was given the impression that it was “turned off”. She said there was no other way to walk around. The pat down was extremely thorough in all the private places and she could not see where her purse was during the ordeal. I’m flying on Saturday and plan to ask to walk OUTSIDE around the scanner on my way to my free massage. Do you think I’ll be able to do that…or should I be prepared to loudly demand it? It sounds like they’ve designed the architecture of the set up to train everybody to walk through the scanner. I feel like a puppy being leash trained being allowed to walk around with the collar and leash on but not being held by the master…until later. See puppy? Walking through the body scanner isn’t so bad, now is it? Maybe the masseur will be give me a dog biscuit first.

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  • http://www.cogitamusblog.com/ Lisa Simeone

    I flew out of BWI last week, September 22, 2010. At 9:30am security line stunningly empty; more TSA guards than passengers. After declining the stripsearch scanner, as is my right according to TSA’s own website, I was made to wait. And wait. And wait. And wait.

    At one point there was *no one* in the security line. No passengers. It was then that I turned to ask my minder — cheerfully, cause I know you don’t want to antagonize them — if anyone was coming to check me. She screamed at me: “Don’t disrespect me! Don’t disrespect me! You just wait there until somebody comes to search you!”

    I guess among all the other rights we’ve given up at airports, speech is now also prohibited.

    Eventually, a female TSO came over — she was polite — to wand me and pat me down to within an inch of my life.

    Luckily, my husband was there, not only to witness everything (NEVER let them take you alone to a private room), but also to watch my stuff, because the entire time I was waiting I couldn’t see my belongings. Anybody could’ve walked off with anything.

    Though I love travel and am lucky to have done a lot of it in my life, I’ve taken my last flight. And have gotten no end of grief for the decision from family and friends. But it’s time to put our money where our mouths are.

    I’ve been trying for years to get people to recognize the slow, steady, ever-increasing erosion of our civil liberties as exemplified by these absurd TSA procedures. First it was the metal detectors, then the shoes, then the liquids, then the back-of-the-hand pat-down, now the stripsearch scanners and full-on groping. What next — some bozo tries to light his hair on fire and soon everyone has to be shaved before boarding? Or just the simpler, “Bend over and spread”? Every time we acquiesce, to every new tactic, we make it easier for the TSA to abuse us. Because we show them we won’t object.

    Unfortunately, most people will not assert their rights, will not decline the scanner, will not refuse to bow to whatever they throw at us. Alas, we really do get what we deserve.

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  • http://www.greenhoneyhive.blogspot.com Kim Bell

    Women, If you don’t want to go though the scanners and know you are going to be subjected to the “enhanced groping” by security officers…Then ths is what our family has decided we are going to do as far as the women….We are making full length to the hip corsets with full steel boning in them with multiple lines directly over the breasts and we will be wearing homemade extra extra thick, extra long femine pads (like three or four inches thick we figure we can take them off once we get on the plane) attached to very tight fitting underwear. We then will also be wearing over top of that full to knee extremely tight girdle again with steel boning directly over the butt crack an then finally a layer of extra large extremely baggy old fashiond victorian pantaloon….I want to see them really feel me up good trying to grope me or mine genitalia after trying to get through all those layers…If everyone other lady got smart and did the same I think it would not be long before they gave up on this rediculious invasion of our bodies..they want to invade our bodies then fight through my lady armor I will now to wearing to get to it…..Maybe steel chastity belts for your daughter will have to be the next step…Will be for mine if this does not work……..Anyone up for joining us? My husband is demending I make him a extra padded cod piece and something for is nether region along the same lines Any men going for that?

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  • steven2211

    I Have just finished my research and these body scanners CAN & DO effect the double helix dna of every person, sometimes permanently damaging it.

    What I find particularly frightening is the results of that in children yet to be born. There is no way to detect what damage has been done, until its too late, ie the birth.

    This is NOT panic mongering, just the simple and plain facts of the matter regarding these scanners and the software that manages them and the effects of them.

    For those interested in what the deformed will look like there is evidence of what damaged dna does, that is from the UK – Thalidomide.

    see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thalidomide

    also see google images when one searches for Thalidomide. Please note these images displayed may well be severely distressing.

    Of course the government of the time did approve it saying there was no danger, only much later to remove it. They (the government) did not have to deal with the consequences, the parents did. Fortunately for the effected in the UK, they do have a national free health care. Not so lucky others.

    Also and lastly note more testing was done on Thalidomide than these scanners… this is the most disturbing, as much as my research being ignored or blatantly misquoted. It sad to see that we value the money over people’s health and use terrorism as a justification for making money irrespective of the outcome today or as i mentioned in the future.

    If you chose to go thru the body scanner that of course is your choice, i only help that some education about the risks now and in the future will enlighten you.

    Personally I recommend you don’t take the unnecessary risk of these scanners.

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  • http://hogsatemysister.com HogsAteMySister

    The TSA protests must continue! Especially the scrotum eggs. http://bit.ly/bpR7Ac

  • Richard

    Don’t bend over and take it. Protect your 4th Amendment rights. Don’t fly.

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  • RoxanneSilver

    No one has mentioned this, and of course, the government doesn’t want you to know, but every one of those nude scanners has the capability not only to save the images, but to upolad the nude images to the Internet. You know how they tell you to be careful of posting your nude pictures, that it might catch up with you later? Make sure that you keep that in mind before you go through with the nude scanner!

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  • Robin

    It’s about bloody time that the TSA emits to verbally & physically abusing passengers and I think it’s about time that passengers dish back the same types of abuses that the TSA are well know for implimenting due to there power trips.Maybe if this is done by passengers,then it’ll send an open & clear message to the TSA,which will be,if u mess with us,then we’ll do it right back ten times worse

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