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Transportation Security

Airline Passenger Walked Past Security With a Loaded Gun Magazine (apnews.com) 171

An airline passenger "passed a security checkpoint with a loaded gun magazine," reports the Associated Press, citing information from an airport duty manager: Bob Rotiski said the passenger who apparently had visited a shooting range packed a loaded magazine in his carry-on bag. He said an officer identified the magazine during security screening, but the wrong bag was pulled from the line. By that time, the passenger had already left the checkpoint with the bag containing the magazine....

Security lines were closed and flights were temporarily grounded at a San Francisco International Airport terminal...for nearly an hour, and United Airline flights out of Terminal 3 were grounded Saturday morning as TSA officers looked for the passenger.

"Rotiski said the lines reopened after officers located the passenger and brought him back for re-screening."
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Airline Passenger Walked Past Security With a Loaded Gun Magazine

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  • Theater (Score:5, Insightful)

    by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Sunday March 24, 2019 @09:38AM (#58324500)

    Ain't nothing more entertaining than the play that is security theater.

    • Well, at least as long as you are not a passenger waiting for a flight.

    • Re:Theater (Score:4, Insightful)

      by CaptainDork ( 3678879 ) on Sunday March 24, 2019 @10:10AM (#58324568)

      Or the reality TV that is politics.

    • by goombah99 ( 560566 ) on Sunday March 24, 2019 @10:12AM (#58324578)

      1. They did identify the clip
      2. But they searched the wrong bag.

      WOuld you, as a hijacker, think that was a great way to smuggle in a gun? No. while (2) happened it's a low probability event. Not something you would count on.

      Thus as a deterrent for overt attacks this is worked. Not saying the process can't somehow be subverted in some other way but this particular example is not a good one to point at and yell "security theater".

      • They also realized their mistake, grounded the plane, and tracked him down. So it sounds like the process worked.

        • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 24, 2019 @10:45AM (#58324706)

          Protected the public from nothing. Wasted time and money. Job well done.

          • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

            by markdavis ( 642305 )

            >"Protected the public from nothing. Wasted time and money. Job well done."

            +1 exactly

          • by Anonymous Coward

            Protected the public from nothing. Wasted time and money. Job well done.

            This is by far not nothing. Ever heard of a zip gun? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Improvised_firearm The movie "Munich" has a perfect example where a zip gun is disguised as a bicycle pump.

            It would be trivial to get a pipe through diguised as a cane or anything else that will contain and direct the firing of ammunition to where the shooter is intended. Combine that with the threat of multiple people working together and the ammunition could have been handed off to another party, I think the right call was

            • This is by far not nothing. Ever heard of a zip gun?

              Yep. My dad and his buddies used to make them back in the 1930s. They're slow, unreliable, easy to spot on an airplane, and as likely to kill the shooter as whomever he's aiming at.

              And, of course, on an airplane, you'd only get one shot (passengers would take you down while you try to reload--assuming they don't do it far earlier). The best you could hope for is shooting a hole through a window (which, depending on caliber, might not even happen.) This assumes that a person could A) assemble the parts o

              • The best you could hope for is shooting a hole through a window

                No, the best you could hope for is just the threat of shooting a flight attendant gets the pilot to divert or open the door and your associate takes control of the aircraft.

                Likely, you shoot someone, and your associate then covers the rest with his zip gun while you reload.

                Worst is you kill someone and then get taken down. But you've still killed someone, you'll be headline news, and you'll scare people out of flying. This is a major goal of terrorists.

                Which of those three results is "good" for the pub

          • Agreed that this is security theater that offers very little real protection. But I disagree that it's wasted time and money (aside from some of the people doing it taking their jobs way too seriously). If you've lived through a riot [wikipedia.org], you realize that the "protection" offered by the police is mostly an illusion. And that if things really get out of hand, there is really nothing that the police can do. The role of the police is more to calm the public and create the self-fulfilling prophecy of the illusi
      • by Anonymous Coward

        The TSA is security theater, though. From a year and a half ago:
        https://abcnews.go.com/US/tsa-fails-tests-latest-undercover-operation-us-airports/story?id=51022188

        The TSA's tactics does not deter any would be wrong-doer, and inconveniences everyone. The shoe bomber and the underwear bomber plots, for example, were uncovered despite of the TSA, not because of them. The additional screening were implemented after the fact, which further suggests it's all security theater.

      • Oh no, you said clip instead of magazine! That invalidates your entire argument!

      • On top of all that, it's not a gun.

        • A gun is just a tube, a few rubberbands, and a small nail [wikihow.com]. The part that is hard to build anywhere, and is the most important part, is the ammunition. Without the ammunition, the best a gun is, is just a weirdly-shaped club.
          • A gun is just a tube, a few rubberbands, and a small nail. The part that is hard to build anywhere, and is the most important part, is the ammunition.

            If your gun is that primitive, then why not have it be a black powder weapon that shoots balls? Then your ammo is just anything spherical and closely-sized. Flintlocks aren't even considered weapons in kit form, you can order them right through the mail direct to your door.

            • When I was going to build a primitive gun, I did a muzzleloader. I made my black powder from scratch, starting with wood.

            • And percussive caps... Unless you want a flintlock? The reality is that a firearm can be disassembled to the point where the pieces are unrecognizable (I know, I have many of them). Ammunition is MUCH harder to leave in parts because pressing the pieces together is near-impossible without a good press tool.
              • And percussive caps... Unless you want a flintlock? The reality is that a firearm can be disassembled to the point where the pieces are unrecognizable (I know, I have many of them).

                I've got several, too. They might be unrecognizable to an untrained [read: typical] TSA agent, but no semi-automatic pistol's pieces break down to anything not immediately recognizable to anyone who has cleaned a gun before. So why not a flintlock?

            • If your gun is that primitive, then why not have it be a black powder weapon that shoots balls?

              For the same reason that cartridges replaced black powder weapons in general: convenience.

              • For the same reason that cartridges replaced black powder weapons in general: convenience.

                Powder and ball wrapped in paper is called...? [wikipedia.org]

                • Powder and ball wrapped in paper is called..

                  You know very well that comparing black powder to cartridges is not referring to black powder "paper cartridges", and that the "cartridges" in this discussion isn't.

                  • You know very well that comparing black powder to cartridges is not referring to black powder "paper cartridges", and that the "cartridges" in this discussion isn't.

                    They do the same job, albeit one much better than the other. That's why they have the same name.

      • by fafalone ( 633739 ) on Sunday March 24, 2019 @12:45PM (#58325182)
        Well as it turns out, (1) is also a low probability event, as their own internal tests show that it's quite easy to walk right on through with dangerous items. They fail 80-95% [go.com] of the time. Locking the cockpit doors and changing passenger attitudes is what stopped more terror attacks, not sexually assaulting little kids and old women in wheel chairs, making everyone take off their shoes, conducting virtual strip searches, or any other of ridiculous security theater they've got going.
      • I recently took a trip to the UK, and their airport security system would have prevented this particular mistake. At Heathrow, there are two conveyor belts past the scanner, and the person viewing the scanned images can send the item to the cleared belt or the belt for further inspection. Absent this system, the TSA procedure should have been to stop the belt completely until the scanning person points out that item for further inspection.

      • With their success rate for finding shit for every mag they find 4 make it through. So to say the system works is pretty moronic. That would be like saying that a fire suppression system that goes off for 1 out of 5 fires is a working system.

    • Re: Theater (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      It's not theater. TSA takes this stuff very seriously. It's sad people also don't take it seriously.

    • how did they figure out who this passenger was? timestamps on video correlated to the ticket scan at the TSA agent at the start of the security line? sounds like TSA can monitor every passenger that passes through any airport at any time.

      And you thought China was bad.

      -dk

    • Ain't nothing more entertaining than the play that is security theater.

      LOL.. Ain't that the truth. The TSA is basically "feel good" theater that pretends they are making you more secure. Any determined attacker is not stopped by their efforts.

      The only real way to do security in airports is to do things that TSA simply cannot do, profile, run background checks on everybody and making sure to positively ID everybody. Americans wouldn't stand for such invasive searching and as a result, the TSA can only put on a show.

      • >"Ain't that the truth. The TSA is basically "feel good" theater that pretends they are making you more secure. Any determined attacker is not stopped by their efforts."

        Yet they will still cost the tax payers billions and piss us all off with tremendous inconvenience in the process.

        >"The only real way to do security in airports is to do things that TSA simply cannot do[...]Americans wouldn't stand for such invasive searching"

        We can hope they [we] will continue to not stand for it, too. But I fear tho

    • The funny thing is that what a terrorist wants is a large collection of people, all crowded together, in a place where no security checks occur.

      Like, you know, the queue for the security checks.

      • >"The funny thing is that what a terrorist wants is a large collection of people, all crowded together, in a place where no security checks occur. Like, you know, the queue for the security checks."

        Yep. Criminals and terrorists also love so-called "gun-free" zones for the same reason- very low chance of anyone fighting back (because the law-abiding "good" people are stripped of their arms but not the "bad" people), sensitive area, lots of people and often children.

  • by ledow ( 319597 )

    "Rotiski said the lines reopened after officers located the passenger and brought him back for re-screening."

    By which time he could have passed off anything else he was carrying to anyone else in the departure lounges who were already "past security" and they could have easily taken it onto a plane.

    Well done guys.

    • The (short) story doesn't say if the TSAs were able to find the loaded magazine. This is a key point, though.
      • by PPH ( 736903 )

        This.

        If you want to get a weapon by security, you smuggle it in a piece at a time. Over many weeks. And hide the pieces somewhere inside the secured area. If one courier gets stopped, you just repeat the process until a complete set of parts gets in. Assemble and walk onto an airplane.

        • There are much easier, lower risk strategies that security can't address that there is no point in this type of complexity. Anything can be brought onboard for a price.

        • In 'murica, you just buy a new gun at the other end.

    • by Megane ( 129182 )
      Nah, he wasn't finished reading his magazine yet, no way would he give it to someone else!
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday March 24, 2019 @09:55AM (#58324530)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Anonymous Coward

    I'll sure be glad when they finally catch all the terrorists & we can go back to normal.

    Any day now.

  • by ebonum ( 830686 ) on Sunday March 24, 2019 @10:37AM (#58324670)

    Reality: He would have gotten on the plane had a crappy meal, a fraction of a can of Coke(tm) and arrived at his destination. A disaster was not averted. 100's of lives were not saved. A government rule was enforced. Nothing more.

    TSA headline: Our agent heroes saved you AGAIN! Countless lives saved and counting. btw. We demanddeserve another 10 billion in funding.

    • A disaster was not averted

      A bit amplified. What would the guy do with a "loaded magazine"? Throw the bullets at the crew?

    • The real problem is all those people in the world that create hyperbole by making up news headlines that don't exist and make claims that weren't presented anywhere in the source materials.

      Now how the fuck you were voted +5 Insightful instead of -1 Offtopic is beyond me.

    • Four cars rolled up to the four-way stop sign. They departed in the order they rolled in. No one crashed. No life was in danger. All the car occupants went on to continue their miserable pathetic existence, some traffic rule was observed. Nothing more.

      STOP signs saved your life? Another 2 billion spent on traffic rule signage? All waste of money.

      Right buddy?

    • Alternative reality: he got on the plane destined to a different international airport in a country where guns and ammo are severely restricted; gets discovered in immigration customs and is thrown in jail awaiting trial and weapons smuggling charges. It's not that far-fetched either, it's exactly what happened to my father-in-law.
  • It's not even dangerous ffs. You could do more damage bludgeoning someone with an iphone.

    • *Exacty* A loaded magazine is relatively harmless (no more dangerous than a notebook PC). A gun without a loaded magazine is relatively harmless (no more dangerous than a hardwood bat). Ammunition without a magazine or gun is harmless (well, I guess one could get hit in the eye with a hurled round, but that's about it). Only when all three are put together do you have something that's dangerous.
      • *Exacty* A loaded magazine is relatively harmless (no more dangerous than a notebook PC). A gun without a loaded magazine is relatively harmless (no more dangerous than a hardwood bat). Ammunition without a magazine or gun is harmless (well, I guess one could get hit in the eye with a hurled round, but that's about it). Only when all three are put together do you have something that's dangerous.

        So no point to prevent one from making it through. Not like a group of three people could separately try to board, one with an unloaded gun, one with an unloaded magazine and one with bullets.

        • That's a good point. The majority of troublemakers are "lone wolves" but real security does need to protect against a team of 2-4 bad guys boarding the same plane. That's what happened on 9/11.
  • Back in 2006 when we still had the color coded threat levels, I flew from PHX to LAS and back to PHX during a red/severe period. Because it was a quick day trip I only had a carry on bag and that bag happened to be a backpack I had used the week before to go shooting. In that bag was a full 19 round magazine of 9mm FMJ that I had stuffed into a side pocket and forgotten to remove before the trip. I made it through 2 different airport security lines and xray machines without it being noticed or stopped. I di
    • by cstacy ( 534252 )

      The only guns (and other weapons) that have ever been detected and confiscated by TSA were the ones people accidentally left in their bags, like yours. But as you report, they don't even get all of those!

      They run tests to try smuggling guns and knives onto the planes through these checkpoints. The rate of success -- that is FAILURE of security is well above 95^ every time.

      Security Theatre.
      j

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