The 12 Scariest TSA Stories of All Time
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1.
Meg McLain Can't Get Home
What happens
when you opt out of the backscatter scan and ask questions about
the pat down? If you're Meg McLain, you get harassed and ultimately,
get your ticket ripped up. Meg was cuffed in a chair and escorted
out of the airport by 12 Miami cops after she questioned what would
happen to her in the secondary screening pat down. Her US Airways
ticket was torn up, and although US Airways promised to credit her
for a new flight, they then refused to replace her ticket. As a
talk show host with Free
Keene, Meg's story received plenty of attention, with a wildly
popular YouTube video, a visit to the Alex
Jones Show, and an interview
with The Consumerist. The TSA released
surveillance videos of the incident in an attempt to lay the
blame for the incident on McLain; however, some believe that the
videos actually vindicate her.
2.
Ninety-four-year-old stands for her patdown
At 94 years
old, Marian Paterson is not as physically capable as others may
be, and that means that it is not comfortable for her to stand for
long periods of time. But nonetheless, Paterson was made to stand
"for over ten minutes," as she reports, much longer than
is necessary to complete a TSA patdown, and much longer than she
felt physically able to handle. Her family believes that the TSA
went too far, indicating that "they groped her
all over
her body." Marian had trouble understanding why, "of all
the people in America, they'd pick out some little old lady."
3.
A terminal cancer patient is forced to remove her adult diaper
Another elderly
woman, Jean Weber's 95-year-old mother, in the final stages of her
leukemia battle, was forced to submit to a patdown just a week after
receiving a blood transfusion. Her "wet and firm" diaper
was deemed suspicious, and she was taken to a private room. They
had to remove her diaper, and she was separated from her daughter
Jean. She did not have an extra pair, and was forced to go through
the airport without underwear. Although the procedure was technically
correct, Weber feels that "the procedure needs to be changed,"
allowing more sensitivity to those with certain health needs.
4.
Bladder cancer survivor humiliated and covered in urine
The TSA seems
to have it out for those affected by cancer. Tom Sawyer wears a
urostomy bag, a device necessary after his successful fight with
bladder cancer. The TSA scanner picked up his bag, and he was chosen
for a pat down. He had to ask for privacy during the screening,
which he received, albeit not without eye rolling. During the procedure,
he tried several times to explain his medical condition, and warned
them that they could break the seal on his urostomy bag, covering
him with urine. But despite his explanations, Sawyer was ignored,
the seal was broken, and urine spilled all over his shirt, leg,
and pants. The TSA agents' response? As Sawyer recounted, "he
told me I could go. They never apologized. They never offered to
help. They acted like they hadn't seen what happened. But I know
they saw it because I had a wet mark." Without so much as an
apology, Sawyer had to walk through the airport, still soaked in
urine, board his plane, and wait until after takeoff to clean himself
up. On the incident, Sawyer commented, "If this country is
going to sacrifice treating people like human beings in the name
of safety, then we have already lost the war."
5.
Oops, your breasts are exposed. Good thing we have video
An Amarillo
woman filed a suit against the TSA for publicly exposing her breasts
at a Corpus Christi Airport. She was picked out for an extended
search procedure before her flight in 2008, and "as the TSA
agent was frisking plaintiff, the agent pulled the plaintiff's blouse
completely down, exposing plaintiffs' breasts to everyone in the
area." The victim filed an administrative claim against the
TSA, but after the agency failed to respond, she filed a lawsuit.
To further her embarrassment, the victim claims that TSA employees
joked and laughed about her accident, with one male TSA employee
sharing "that he wished he would have been there when she came
through the first time and that 'he would just have to watch the
video.'"
6.
Removing nipple rings with pliers
The TSA indicates
that "security officers are well trained to screen individuals
with body piercings in sensitive areas with dignity and respect,"
but Mandi Hamlin did not receive such treatment. Instead, she was
forced to remove her nipple piercings, one of which had to be taken
out with pliers. The TSA's policy is to give individuals with body
piercings either pat downs or have them remove the piercings in
private; however, Hamlin was not given the option of the pat down
her only available option was to remove her piercings. In
fact, she indicated that she could show a female agent her piercings,
but was told she couldn't board her flight without removing all
piercings. In a letter to the TSA, Hamlin's attorney reminded the
agency that "After nipple rings are inserted, the skin can
often heal around the piercing, and the rings can be extremely difficult
and painful to remove," making what they forced Hamlin to do
cruel, especially as reinserting them is also quite painful. And
as if that wasn't enough, while Hamlin was removing her jewelry
behind a curtain, she heard male TSA agents snickering at her plight.
Her lawyer notes, "The last time that I checked, a nipple was
not a dangerous weapon."
7.
Sikh profiled for screening, forced to remove his turban
The TSA recommends
removing all headwear, "but the rules accommodate those with
religious, medical, or other reasons for which the passenger wishes
not to remove the item." That is not the experience that Gurdeep
Singh Bawa received at Chicago O'Hare in 2010. For religious reasons,
Bawa does not let anyone touch his turban, and he does not take
it off, an action that is very disrespectful. Despite clearing two
tests for explosives trace detection, he was told he would have
to take his turban off. After removing it in a private room, officers
took it away, bringing it back minutes later. Bawa and other Sikhs
in his community feel that they are being "religiously, racially
profiled," and Bawa in particular feels that he was offended,
noting, "I've never been humiliated like this in my life."
8.
Taking a teddy bear away from a three-year-old girl
Kids often
get very attached to toys, and three-year-old Mandy Simon is no
exception. So when screeners took her teddy bear away from her to
run it through the x-ray machine, she was very upset. Although it
was standard procedure, the incident was jarring for little Mandy,
and she was so upset about her teddy bear, she couldn't walk calmly
through the metal detector, setting the machine off twice. It was
at that point that she had to be patted down, still crying, and
screaming, "Stop touching me!" Her dad, a Houston TV news
reporter, caught the incident on video, which ended up getting lots
of attention and pushback from Slashdot
and a mention in several news outlets, including NY
Daily News.
9.
Suing for a concussion
In
2010, Robin Kassner sued the TSA for using abusive bodily force
against her at the Reagan National Airport in 2007. The TSA claims
that "was interfering with the screening process and refusing
to follow security procedures." The security cameras show a
scuffle, with Kassner wrestled to the floor by police, and taking
an elbow to the head as she was slammed on a table. Kassner claims
that she blacked out and suffered a concussion, which has led to
memory problems. It's not clear what she did to provoke such a response.
She is seeking $10 million in damages for the incident.
10.
We don't care about your disability, little boy
Four-year-old
Ryan Thomas was born sixteen weeks early, and as a result, is developmentally
delayed: at the time of his TSA incident, he was just starting to
walk. His parents use a stroller for him, as well as leg braces
for his malformed legs with low muscle tone. Unable to walk steadily
on his own, his mother initially walked him through the metal detector,
and his leg braces set the alarm off. Ryan was forced to take off
his leg braces, but his mother was not allowed to help him walk
this time he had to walk on his own. That's right, a disabled
four-year-old just learning to walk with the assistance of leg braces
had to walk, without any physical assistance or the use of his braces,
through the detector for TSA. After Ryan's father went to the press,
the TSA apologized to the family, and acknowledged that there are
other ways to screen those with disabilities, including those that
don't require a disabled child to do what is nearly impossible.
11.
Amputee separated from her four-year-old son
Peggy is a
mother of a four-year-old, and she also has a below-knee amputation.
Both she and her son were subjected to invasive pat downs, and were
also separated from each other. Peggy had to sit and watch without
helping or comforting her son as he was patted down, which included
a peek in his diaper, an experience that left him shaking but still
not able to seek the comfort of his mother. Peggy had her own, far
worse embarrassment to deal with after her son's ordeal. She had
to remove not just her prosthetic leg, but her prosthetic liner,
and run them through the x-ray scanner. Her prosthetic liner must
be kept sanitary to avoid infection and a possible higher level
amputation, and above that, protects from sight a part of Peggy's
body that she feels "is on par with one's genitals." She
was gawked at while her liner was run through the machine with no
attempt to keep it sanitary, and was then thrown haphazardly into
her lap. Peggy's story reached Boing
Boing, and is a focal point of the Amputee
Coalition of America's Call for Improved Screening Procedures for
TSA.
12.
TSA agents took my son
The TSA doesn't
seem to respect the bond and safety of mother and child. In 2009,
Nicole White claims she was separated from her 16-month-old son,
Jackson. According to the TSA, they "will not ask you to do
anything that will separate you from your child or children,"
but that was not Nicole and Jackson's experience. After his pacifier
clip set off an alarm, Nicole and Jackson were escorted together
to a plastic box, where they waited and became increasingly late
for their flight. They were eventually patted down, but instead
of patting down Jackson in Nicole's lap, a TSA agent insisted that
he had to be picked up, and Nicole handed him to the agent. It was
at that point the agent walked away with her son, and despite Nicole's
questions and tears, she could not see Jackson and was ignored until
the TSA threatened to involve the authorities. She was separated
from her son for an estimated 10 minutes, during which time she
had a panic attack. The TSA posted
videos to discredit her story, but Nicole, just like Meg McLain,
maintains
that the full incident was not posted, including the time when Jackson
was taken away and Nicole made two phone calls to her husband and
mother.
Reprinted
with permission from InsuranceQuotes.org.
August
22, 2011
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