Just to put things in perspective…
This item in today’s news would seem to indicate that the TSA has committed more crimes than they’ve prevented. I can’t recall the last (ANY?) terrorist plot the TSA has been responsible for averting, can you?
NEW YORK (AP) — A Transportation Security Administration agent stole $5,000 in cash from a passenger’s jacket as he was going through security at John F. Kennedy International Airport, authorities said Thursday, the latest in a string of thefts that has embarrassed the agency.
Alexandra Schmid took the cash from a Bangladeshi passenger’s jacket as it went along an X-ray conveyor belt Wednesday night in Terminal 4, said Al Della Fave, spokesman for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey’s police force.
Surveillance video showed Schmid taking the money from a jacket pocket, wrapping the cash in a plastic glove and taking it to a bathroom, Della Fave said.
The money hasn’t been recovered, he said. Police are investigating whether Schmid gave it to another person in the bathroom.
The 31-year-old Schmid was arrested on a charge of grand larceny and suspended pending an investigation. Her attorney’s name wasn’t immediately known.
Schmid, who lived in Brooklyn, had worked for the TSA for 4½ years, TSA spokeswoman Lisa Farbstein said.
"We do hold our officers to very high standards, and we have a zero tolerance policy for theft in the workplace," Farbstein said.
Wednesday’s arrest came the same day that a federal judge sentenced former TSA screener Ricky German to eight months in prison for trying to steal a laptop from a passenger at the Memphis airport in December 2010. German was convicted of theft by a government employee, depriving a citizen of his rights and making false statements.
The cases are part of a series of recent theft allegations against TSA employees:
— Last month, an agent who worked searching checked luggage at the Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport was suspended after the owner of a stolen iPad used the tracking feature on the device to locate it at the agent’s home. Police found seven other iPads there.
—On Jan. 10, former TSA agent Paul Yashou pleaded guilty to stealing a $15,000 watch from a passenger’s belongings at Los Angeles International Airport in May. He is awaiting sentencing.
— Two other former TSA agents at JFK were sentenced on Jan. 10 to six months in jail and five years’ probation for stealing $40,000 from a piece of luggage in January 2011. The agents, Coumar Persad and Davon Webb, had pleaded guilty to grand larceny, obstructing governmental administration and official misconduct.
— Also in January, authorities charged an agent at Miami International Airport with swiping items and luggage and smuggling them out of the airport in a hidden pocket of his work jacket. He was arrested after one of the items, an iPad, was spotted for sale on Craigslist. Another TSA employee was arrested in July at nearby Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport after an airline employee reported that the man slipped an iPad into his pants.
— In December, police charged a TSA screener at New York’s LaGuardia Airport with lifting a laptop after a Detroit-bound passenger left it behind at the security station.
— Earlier last year, a TSA supervisor and one of his officers pleaded guilty in a scheme that lifted $10,000 to $30,000 from passengers’ belongings at Newark Liberty International Airport. A federal judge sentenced the supervisor, Michael Arato, to 2½ years in prison and his subordinate, Al Raimi, to six months of home confinement.
What to do if the government are the villains..
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sigh. You really have to wonder sometimes.
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Wow.
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RYN: I’m curious how much their administrators are paid. I think I’ll look that up…
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Oh those thieving agents. I’m surprised people carry so much money in their luggage. I wouldn’t leave any valuables in my luggage.
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Ryn: Thank you, I appreciate it.. I used to do technical support a couple years ago, but I really haven’t kept up with it too much..got tired of working with machines for the most part.. I actually just got offered a job yesterday as a Receiver for a grocery store here.. Pays right around 30k a year, so as long as I dont screw it up, I think Im decently off..
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The TSA has reportedly prevented “millions of weapons” from getting on flights through diligent pre-boarding security checks. However, their definition of “weapon” is openly disputed as they claim everything from pocket knives to nail clippers are now considered “weapons”. They additionally claim to have stopped a similarly high number of passengers from carrying “contraband substances” onto an a
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(an) aircraft. However, that is an equally ambigious term due to the fact that they will not allow more than 2 oz. of liquid from getting past security, including drinking water. The irony is that many of the items they are willing to confiscate from passengers at security screening checkpoints are available for purchase at kiosks and restaurants in and around the terminal gates.
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As far as the claim that they handle drunken passengers and deal with cases of assault of airline personnel – those are examples of actions that require intervention of the airport police or the in-flight air marshall. The TSA agents are merely security personnel, not law officers, and have no authority to detain passengers outside of the security checkpoint.
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Even when persons passing through the TSA checkpoint break a law, the TSA agents can only detain the person until such time the proper authorities can take the person into custody. However, despite their due diligence, there are numerous reports of handguns, makeshift bombs, and even contraband materials making it through the screening process without detection.
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The real economical impact goes beyond just the $88B spend on the design and build of the TSA. Passengers are further impacted through increased ticketing fees, increased travel costs due to missed flights, and additional travel expenditures for items they had to purchase on the other end due to blocking or confiscation by TSA personnel not to mention the increased theft by TSA personnel.
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jeesh. When I travel for work I’ve learned to FedEx all my equipment. If I were to get to a location without my stuff, I’d be useless, however, all this time I thought I wasn’t trusting the airlines, not giving a thought to the tsa agents.
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I thought this only happened in South Africa! Goodness, it makes me so mad! I wonder if the passenger who lost the $5000 were compensated. Just imagine the hardship the passenger must now endure! It’s such a shame!
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if they can steal that easily what else could they let pass through or plant even? thats scarey.
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I hate TSA
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Will keep my devices right under my nose …
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