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View Full Version : Feds firing over 30 TSA agerts at Honolulu's airport



Dogman
10th June 2011, 01:01 PM
Just in and new, about the firings (Yea) looks like the feds have been investigating for a while.

This is about the investigation. can not find anything on the net about the firings yet.

http://articles.cnn.com/2011-03-02/travel/hawaii.tsa.security.lapse_1_screening-lapses-tsa-officers-feds-probe?_s=PM:TRAVEL
Feds probe alleged screening lapses at Honolulu's airport


he Transportation Security Administration is investigating between 25 and 30 officers who allegedly routinely failed to check luggage during early morning flights out of Hawaii's Honolulu International Airport.The investigation, first reported by KITV 4 in Honolulu and confirmed by CNN, involves the alleged failure of the officers to check thousands of checked bags for explosives on nine daily morning departures. The lapses are believed to have occurred for as long as four months, KITV 4 reported.
TSA officers are required to screen 100% of all checked bags before they are stored in the cargo holds of passenger aircraft.



The investigation does not involve officers at airport checkpoints, where carry-on bags are screened.
A source familiar with the investigation told CNN that investigators are conducting polygraph tests to determine the extent of the security lapse and the exact number of officers who failed their responsibility at the airport.
A TSA spokesman said the agency "is taking appropriate disciplinary action against several TSA officers following an extensive investigation into allegations of improper screening."
"We took immediate action and none of the personnel accused have been conducting screening duties since the allegations were made," spokesman Nico Melendez said. "TSA is proud to hold our workforce to the highest ethical standards and will not tolerate a deviation from the commitment to carry out our mission to protect the traveling public."




This is what is said, wonder what was not said? Having the fed's investigate their own is like having the fox guard the chicken coop.



Good for the fox not good for the chickens. (us)

Horn
10th June 2011, 02:06 PM
A source familiar with the investigation told CNN that investigators are conducting polygraph tests to determine the extent of the security lapse and the exact number of officers who failed their responsibility at the airport.

True, the use of a polygraph seems to be going too far, just to make it all news worthy...

Son-of-Liberty
10th June 2011, 03:11 PM
These guys can't even do their jobs right but we are supposed to be ok with the groping? Must have been a miracle Al CIAda, I mean Al Qaeda didn't capitalize on the situation.