I placed a call to the TSA and talked to Joe Dove, a Customer
Service Supervisor. I told him how we'd eaten with metal utensils
moments in an airport diner before boarding the flight and how no
one checked our luggage or the instrument cases being carried by the
Middle Eastern men. Dove's response was, "Restaurants in secured
areas -- that's an ongoing problem. We get that complaint often. TSA
gets that complaint all the time and they haven't worked that out
with the FAA. They're aware of it. You've got a good question. There
may not be a reasonable answer at this time, I'm not going to BS
you."
At the Detroit airport no one checked our IDs. No one checked the
folds in my newspaper or the contents of my son's backpack. No
one asked us what we'd done during our layover, if we bought
anything, or if anyone gave us anything while we were in the
airport. We were asked all of these questions (and many others )
three weeks earlier when we'd traveled in Europe -- where passengers
with airport layovers are rigorously questioned and screened before
boarding any and every flight. In Detroit no one checked who we were
or what we carried on board a 757 jetliner bound for America's
largest metropolis.
Two days after my experience on Northwest Airlines flight #327
came this notice from SBS TV, The World News, July 1,
2004:
"The U.S. Transportation and Security Administration has issued
a new directive which demands pilots make a pre-flight
announcement banning passengers from congregating in aisles and
outside the plane's toilets. The directive also orders flight
attendants to check the toilets every two hours for suspicious
packages."
Through a series of events, The Washington Post heard
about my story. I talked briefly about my experience with a
representative from the newspaper. Within a few hours I received a
call from Dave Adams, the Federal Air Marshal Services (FAM) Head of
Public Affairs. Adams told me what he knew:
There were 14 Syrians on NWA flight #327. They were questioned at
length by FAM, the FBI and the TSA upon landing in Los Angeles. The
14 Syrians had been hired as musicians to play at a casino in the
desert. Adams said they were "scrubbed." None had arrest records (in
America, I presume), none showed up on the FBI's "no fly" list or
the FBI's Most Wanted Terrorists List. The men checked out and they
were let go. According to Adams, the 14 men traveled on Northwest
Airlines flight #327 using one-way tickets. Two days later they were
scheduled to fly back on jetBlue from Long Beach, California to New
York -- also using one-way tickets.
More
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