PDA

View Full Version : Ex-TSA Agent: We Steal From Travelers All the Time



madfranks
2nd October 2012, 01:25 PM
The thing is, the cautious side of me never allowed me to leave anything valuable in my travel bags because I knew there would be people snooping through it. But seriously folks, if you didn't already know, never leave anything valuable in a checked bag. What kind of idiot leaves $170,000 cash in his checked luggage? Answer: someone who trusts and believes their government is looking out for them.

http://lewrockwell.com/rep3/tsa-agents-steal.html


A TSA agent convicted of stealing more than $800,000 worth of goods from travelers said this type of theft is “commonplace” among airport security. Almost 400 TSA officers have been fired for stealing from passengers since 2003.
Pythias Brown, a former Transportation Security Administration officer at Newark Liberty International Airport, spent four years stealing everything he could from luggage and security checkpoints, including clothing, laptops, cameras, Nintendo Wiis, video games and cash.
Speaking publicly for the first time after being released after three years in prison, Brown told ABC News that he used the X-ray scanners to locate the most valuable items to snatch.
“I could tell whether it was cameras or laptops or portable cameras or whatever kind of electronic was in the bag,” he said.
Brown often worked alone, screening luggage behind the ticket counters. He was frequently told the overhead surveillance cameras, installed to prevent theft, were not working.
“It was so easy,” he said. “I walked right out of the checkpoint with a Nintendo Wii in my hand. Nobody said a word.”

With more electronics than any one individual could need, Brown began to sell the stolen items on eBay. At the time of his arrest, he was selling 80 cameras, video games and computers online. Brown said the theft was comparable to an addiction.
“It was like being on drugs,” he said. “I was like, ‘What am I doing?’ but the next day I was right back at it.”
Brown was finally caught after selling a camera he stole from the luggage of a CNN producer. When he sold the camera on eBay, he forgot to remove the news networks’ logo stickers.
“I got complacent,” he said.
TSA’s culture of theft
But while Brown believes he might have been one of the worst thieves at the TSA, he imagines the agency’s culture makes it easy for others to do the same. Many officers don’t care about their work and complain about low pay and being treated badly, he claims, which prompts them to steal. To make it even easier to get away with, TSA managers also never search their employees’ bags.
The agency says it has a zero-tolerance policy for theft and terminates the contracts of all thieves within the TSA. In the past ten years, almost 400 TSA officers have been fired for stealing, 11 of which were fired this year.

ABC’s interview with Brown highlights the extent of the dilemma passengers face when traveling with valuables. Brown is just one of many officers caught in the act of stealing goods worth thousands.
In February, 2011, two TSA officers were arrested for stealing $40,000 in cash from a checked bag in New York’s John F. Kennedy Airport. Using an X-ray machine, the men found that the bag contained $170,000 and removed some of the money.
In the first two months of this year, a TSA baggage screener in Orlando was arrested for stealing valuables by hiding them in a laptop-sized hidden pocket in his jacket and selling the goods on Craigslist. And, a New Jersey-based agent stole $5,000 in cash from a passenger’s jacket as he was going through security
While in April, a Texas-based TSA officer stole eight iPads from checked bags, while another officer stole a $15,000 watch from a passenger at the Los Angeles International Airport in May.
“It was very commonplace, very,” Brown said, describing the frequency of theft within the TSA.
“TSA is probably the worst personnel manager that we have in the entire federal government,” said Rep. John Mica, chairman of the House Transportation Committee. “It is an outrage to the public and, actually, to our aviation security system.”

Twisted Titan
2nd October 2012, 05:35 PM
Classic federal employee.

They mimic their pimp gubbermint daddy

Glass
2nd October 2012, 07:20 PM
dont think I've ever been on a trip where the luggage has not been rifled through, locks cut off etc The thing that scares me the most about travelling would be to have someone "working at the airport" to put drugs or such in my luggage only to get pinged somewhere nice like Singapore or Malaysia. I remember going through one customs check point, having the locks cut off the luggage, a thorough search, then a piece of sticky red paper was wrapped around the zipper pulls to secure my luggage from tampering while in transit. A piece of paper. Not even vinyl. Did it work? Nope.

That was a nervous time. I pulled my luggage and dumped the contents on the concourse floor much to the consternation of security. Then I repacked while they watched me. Not taking the risk of something unwanted being found in my luggage.

one thing I have leant as a traveller is never travel with a hikers backpack. You get all the attention and most of that you don't want........

TheNocturnalEgyptian
2nd October 2012, 08:13 PM
Just declare a handgun or starter's pistol at the airport. Your luggage is locked in front of you, and cannot legally be unlocked without you there.


But yeah, I would imagine lost and confiscated items are in the multi-million dollar range. I want to say approaching a billion. It's insane how much stuff gets pinched.

sirgonzo420
2nd October 2012, 10:09 PM
Just declare a handgun or starter's pistol at the airport. Your luggage is locked in front of you, and cannot legally be unlocked without you there.


But yeah, I would imagine lost and confiscated items are in the multi-million dollar range. I want to say approaching a billion. It's insane how much stuff gets pinched.

Hell, there are probably millions of $$$'s just in the confiscated fingernail clippers, not to mention the stolen iPads and such from luggage, and who knows how much dead plant matter.

PatColo
3rd October 2012, 02:27 AM
what's so hard about, for TSA goons in a position to steal, they work in a controlled access area, they walk through a metal detector at start of shift (first depositing all legit metal possessions on them), again when leaving controlled area, ditto @ breaks/lunch, & end of shift?

Don't PM mining worker bees do this? TSA, unchecked, would appear to be a richer goldmine!

Also, some scanning/record-keeping mechanism which connects specific TSA goons with every specific bag which they "checked". Checked bags already have the airline's bar code sticker!

And CCTV cams pointed on them doing their thing, keeping all video for 90 days or whatever, in case of theft claims from passengers, there would be a full trail of evidence leading to the probable TSA thief (& perhaps vindicating them in the case of fraudulent traveler theft claims).

Glass
3rd October 2012, 02:54 AM
I see your point. It should be easy to pick these guys out. Perhaps they are and we don't hear about them all.

Still given the reliability of their systems chances are cameras are not functioning and staff probably walk around the metal detectors. Crims frisking crims. Who do think it going to "dob" one of their work colleagues in? A lot of proffessions are like this apparently. Keep it all a bit hush hush.


Dob (somebody) in : inform on somebody. Hence dobber, a tell-tale (http://www.koalanet.com.au/australian-slang.html#D)

Perhaps the ones we hear about are frame ups. Not towing the line. Troublemakers who got some kind of ethics problem as in they have some.

PatColo
3rd October 2012, 03:46 AM
yeah I was going to remark on the likelihood of the TSA "internal watchers" being in on the racket, IE blind eye at the metal detector etc. "Blue code" as with the cops.

So we also have the "casino blackjack dealer" model, with the overhead cams, and they must do everything a certain way, like the way cash is displayed as they sell a player new chips, pass winners their chips, etc- all done in a way to make it so cam "sees" (records) everything. The dealers are under careful scrutiny to guard against their pilfering (protect djoo casino owner's profits).

Combine that with TSA agent barcode scanning and "owning" every bag they pass or open/search alike... they're to search bags within certain area fully in cam's eye, lay the contents out a certain way, repack, etc. All for THEIR PROTECTION! ;)

An ongoing TSA thief would attract a growing passenger theft claim trail (remember TSA goon OWNs every bag they "check", via accompanying barcode scan), so whether or not a given TSAer found some clever way to trick the cam records, and were repeatedly "vindicated" in investigations... their shit would still stink, just based on "attracting" higher than average theft-claims per bag.


Almost 400 TSA officers have been fired for stealing from passengers since 2003.

merely being FIRED isn't good enough. They need to be convicted & sentenced.

Neuro
3rd October 2012, 09:22 AM
So they hire thieves on a regular basis... How about terrorists? If they can sidestep the security to get their loot out of the airport, why couldn't they do the same to get explosives and guns in? If the price is right?

madfranks
3rd October 2012, 11:41 AM
So they hire thieves on a regular basis... How about terrorists? If they can sidestep the security to get their loot out of the airport, why couldn't they do the same to get explosives and guns in? If the price is right?

That's why they call it "security theater", because it doesn't really do anything to stop terrorists, it just makes it look that way.

Santa
3rd October 2012, 12:03 PM
"Many officers don’t care about their work and complain about low pay and being treated badly, he claims, which prompts them to steal." Well, the TSA obviously needs to give their employees nice big raises.

iOWNme
3rd October 2012, 12:22 PM
The thing is, the cautious side of me never allowed me to leave anything valuable in my travel bags because I knew there would be people snooping through it.


How about instead of not putting valuables in our own bags because we know CRIMINALS will be looking through it, we just dont go to places where known CRIMINALS will be ruffling through our stuff?

madfranks
3rd October 2012, 12:59 PM
How about instead of not putting valuables in our own bags because we know CRIMINALS will be looking through it, we just dont go to places where known CRIMINALS will be ruffling through our stuff?

Unfortunate as it may be, some of us are required to fly due to being in industries where frequent travel is required. I did a cost/benefit analysis of quitting my job in order to avoid flying but the benefit of being able to avoid airports was not great enough to trump the loss of job and income.

gunDriller
3rd October 2012, 04:22 PM
this is not unique to TSA.

i had a laptop stolen on either Air Canada or by a Russian maintenance guy at a hotel in Canada. never did find out who.

low-hanging valuable fruit, e.g. valuable stuff in luggage at an airport, or valuable stuff in a hotel room where a crime ring is operating ... the low-hanging fruit will get picked.