Fascist Files: TSA agents assault and humiliate passengers who complain!
TSA agents forced woman to remove nipple rings and pulled
the pants off a disabled man
July 22, 2008 - When travelers go to the airport, they
know what kind of security to expect: luggage searches, metal detectors and
shoe inspections.
It's all part of our post 9-11 paranoia enforced by the Transportation Security
Administration. But as CBS 2 Investigator Pam Zekman reports, thousands of
travelers have complained that some of these screenings can become abusive and
even x-rated.
For arguing with a TSA agent, Robin Kassner wound up being slammed to the floor.
She's filed a lawsuit.
"I kept begging them over and over again get off of me ... and they
wouldn't stop," Kassner said.
And it wasn't enough for another woman to show TSA agents nipple rings that set
off a metal detector. The agents forced her to take them out.
Mandi Hamlin said, "I had to get pliers and pull it apart."
In Chicago, people like Robert Perry are subjected to exhaustive security
checks. He was patted down, his wheelchair was examined and his hands were
swabbed, all in public view in a see-through room at the security checkpoint.
Perry, 71, is not alone.
"It's humiliating," said Perry.
Perry was also taken to a see-through room by a TSA agent when his artificial
knee set off the metal detector.
"He yelled at me to get the belt off. 'I told you to get the belt off.' So
I took the belt off. He ran his hands down over and pulled the pants down, they
went down around my ankle," Perry said.
At that point, Perry was standing in his underwear in public view. He asked to
see a supervisor. That made things worse.
"She was yelling 'I have power, I have power, I have power," Perry
said. The power to stop him from flying to Florida with his wife that day to
celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary.
"It makes you feel like you have no rights," Perry said.
Perry said he always alerts TSA agents about his metal knee and wonders why
they can't just check his leg.
"If somebody told me that I would save the people on the airplane by
taking my pants off out in public out there, I wouldn't mind doing it, but this
was not necessary," Perry said.
TSA officials said that when the metal detectors go off, their agents must
resolve what caused the alarm. But experts have said it's important to use
common sense when balancing security and customer service.
Carlos Villarreal, former director of security for the Sears Tower, said proper
training is crucial. "When you're wanding somebody and you can identify
which part of the body set of the alarm, that should be sufficient to clear a
person," Villarreal said.
But all too often, it's not enough for 16-year old Michael Angone. She
frequently flies as a member of the Chicago Children's Choir.
"I've had to completely take my pants off and show them like my entire
leg," Angone said.
As a baby, Angone was diagnosed with cancer. Her parents, both Chicago police
officers, had to have her leg amputated. She said she always warns TSA security
agents that her prosthetic leg will set off the metal detector, but many insist
on doing an embarrassing full body pat-down.
"I feel like I'm being felt up in public," Angone said.
Her father Bob Angone wanted to know, "What's the reason for all the
feeling up, you know the groping at the back of the neck, the chest, underneath
the bra, all the groping on her body, her buttocks?"
CBS 2 News asked the TSA those questions, but got no answers.
"The key word here is reasonable, and they have gone off the track. They
are not reasonable," Bob Angone said.
The TSA declined to comment on the Angone and Perry cases, but the agency has announced
that soon, passengers who set off an alarm that cannot be resolved will have a
choice: Agree to a physical pat-down or what some believe is an even worse
invasion of privacy.
This fall, O'Hare International Airport will get its first advanced digital
x-ray machine. It allows TSA agents to see through clothes and discover any
hidden weapons. Critics have likened it to a virtual strip search.
A spokesman said that out of 2 billion passengers screened nationwide since
9-11, there have been only 110,000 abuse complaints.
As for the nipple ring case, TSA did change its procedures regarding body
piercings.