T1bubba
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2001
- Posts
- 317
I picked the wrong day to go outside security for some food...
T1
Screeners' mistake holds up 40 flights
Carlos Miller
The Arizona Republic
Oct. 18, 2003 12:00 AM
A procedural blunder by Transportation Security Administration screeners disrupted flights for more than 4,000 passengers Friday night at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport.
More than 40 flights were delayed for several hours while police and federal security officials combed the airport in search of a man possibly carrying a knife.
It is not clear if the man, who minutes earlier had been waved through the security checkpoint by screeners, even had a knife, Transportation Security Administration spokeswoman Suzanne Luber said.
"The possibility exists that something may have gone through," she said.
It started at 5:10 p.m. in Terminal 4 when a screener spotted what appeared to be a knife in a passenger's carry-on bag as it passed through an X-ray machine.
That screener informed a second screener, who searched the bag but found nothing, Luber said. The second screener then waved the passenger through. He was never located.
Within minutes, transportation agency officials realized they failed to follow through with the third step required for such incidents, which led to the evacuation of the six concourses. Luber did not describe what the required third step entailed, citing security reasons.
It was two hours before passengers were allowed back inside the evacuated areas.
During that time, tempers flared as thousands of passengers stood in lines that stretched clear across the terminal.
"This is a result of the Bush administration, which wants to treat us like cattle," said Mark Williams, 52, a University of Colorado professor who had been waiting in line for more than two hours.
One passenger, trying not to let the setback interfere with her weekend partying plans, butted heads with a police officer who snatched her beer as she stood in line.
"The airport owes me five bucks for that," she said, adding that she carried the beer out of an airport bar.
T1
Screeners' mistake holds up 40 flights
Carlos Miller
The Arizona Republic
Oct. 18, 2003 12:00 AM
A procedural blunder by Transportation Security Administration screeners disrupted flights for more than 4,000 passengers Friday night at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport.
More than 40 flights were delayed for several hours while police and federal security officials combed the airport in search of a man possibly carrying a knife.
It is not clear if the man, who minutes earlier had been waved through the security checkpoint by screeners, even had a knife, Transportation Security Administration spokeswoman Suzanne Luber said.
"The possibility exists that something may have gone through," she said.
It started at 5:10 p.m. in Terminal 4 when a screener spotted what appeared to be a knife in a passenger's carry-on bag as it passed through an X-ray machine.
That screener informed a second screener, who searched the bag but found nothing, Luber said. The second screener then waved the passenger through. He was never located.
Within minutes, transportation agency officials realized they failed to follow through with the third step required for such incidents, which led to the evacuation of the six concourses. Luber did not describe what the required third step entailed, citing security reasons.
It was two hours before passengers were allowed back inside the evacuated areas.
During that time, tempers flared as thousands of passengers stood in lines that stretched clear across the terminal.
"This is a result of the Bush administration, which wants to treat us like cattle," said Mark Williams, 52, a University of Colorado professor who had been waiting in line for more than two hours.
One passenger, trying not to let the setback interfere with her weekend partying plans, butted heads with a police officer who snatched her beer as she stood in line.
"The airport owes me five bucks for that," she said, adding that she carried the beer out of an airport bar.