FlyerTalk Forums - View Single Post - Today was the day...(The Michael Roberts/ExpressJet Story)
Old Oct 17, 2010, 4:58 pm
  #97  
Boggie Dog
FlyerTalk Evangelist
 
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: DFW
Posts: 28,130
Originally Posted by eyecue
He presents himself as being a pilot. There is a big difference. We are not going to follow him and see if he actually is going to fly. TSA has no way to tell if he is authentic. Therefore the AIT gets used. There was a pilot in DEN that brought something through while he was using his uniform because he could.
Your Professional Travel Document/ID Checker must know if a pilots airline credentials are bona fide, correct?

Originally Posted by jkhuggins
I really hate to be the one to defend TSA here (gasp!), but there is something accomplished here.

Yes, a pilot can crash his own aircraft, so there's nothing gained regarding the security of his flights. But the pilot could also be carrying contraband (knowingly or unknowingly; willingly or unwillingly) through the checkpoint which could be passed on to a third party inside the sterile area, thereby presenting a threat to some other flight.

Remember: part of the reason for the multi-hour debacle at EWR last year was that after Wrong Way Corrigan entered the sterile area through the exit, he was left unobserved for a long period of time. They fairly quickly figured out that he'd left the area, but didn't know if he'd done Something Dangerous(TM) in the meantime ... leading them to dump the whole terminal and search the place from stem to stern.

If you don't physically screen everyone who enters the sterile area, every time --- including TSOs, vendors, pilots, maintenance workers, and custodians --- then you have a built-in mechanism to introduce "contraband" (however you want to define it) into the secure area. Of course, TSA already declines to physically screen most of those I've named.

Either screen everybody, or don't bother screening anybody.
A couple of points.

Would the pilot be unaware of contraband directly on his person?

If TSA neglects to screen everyone, as you pointed out, then why is it important to screen anyone else?

Last edited by Kiwi Flyer; Oct 23, 2010 at 2:33 am Reason: merge consecutive posts
Boggie Dog is offline