T_O
Usagi-chan!
- Joined
- Mar 12, 2016
- Messages
- 187
If I understand the article correctly, the woman did not want to go through the body scan because she had a child she was holding. She requested that her hands be swabbed for explosives instead of going through the body scan - which apparently she's savvy enough to know she can opt for instead of the body scan machine (I didn't know that) and I wonder why she didn't opt for the metal detector w/ a toddler. TSA swabbed her hands as she requested and she tested positive for explosives.
Once she's positive for explosives she represents a threat, IMO. She presumptively has explosives on herself - so were did she hide them? They ask her to set the child down, which she does, but then, contrary to what she's been told to do, she picks the child back up. Her excuse is she was apparently unable to hand of her child to her husband because he for an unknown reason went to a different line (suspicious in and of itself as most family groups go through the line together.)
Now it is likely that the false positive was caused by a false positive (glycerin in baby wipes?) but she chose the swab rather than the body scan.
I'm no fan of TSA, but when it comes to someone testing positive for explosives I don't want them on my plane unless TSA knows for sure they do not have any.
The simple answer is choose the body scan next time.
He was probably in a different line, because they made him go through the body scanner. Typically, I go through just the metal detector with DS, since he's still young enough to not have to go through the scanner. Some airports let us all just go through the metal detector, and some will only allow one parent to skip the scanner. So, the different line may have just been the people going through the scanner. We get separated like that often. Hopefully, not much anymore though, because we just got enrolled in TSA PrecheckI am very leery of some of the scanners, being an electrical engineer, I don't really trust that they know what they are doing or keep them properly maintained or calibrated. I also don't trust that it finds much that's worth the risk of doing the machines. Especially when they consider my tiny, Jedi-like braid something that needs a pat down
I guess I could be hiding a sewing needle.
Anyway, I can't stand how they refuse to answer questions. They should explain why you are getting more screening and exactly what they are doing and what you should o. They just seem to like to yell at peopleI do feel bad for the screeners. I think their work environment is very much like the IRS was when my mother worked there. They make everyone miserable, so that the only thing they know to do is to be jerks to the public. I feel bad for this woman. I have been screened underneath my clothes with hands, but it was explained to me what would happen and why. It was a few weeks after 9/11, and we were returning to the US from Europe. The poor female screener was pretty upset about having to do it.
The lady was in an airport that has direct international flights. She tested positive for explosives. She played the child card. She did not follow their directions to not touch her son (as they then would have had to do the procedure on him. She tried to add an additional person (husband) into the fray. Those things are viewed one way from her perspective, but from a security perspective, she could appear to be circumventing the system by carrying a child and then causing a diversion as she hands off him and his things to a party who made it thru security (bait and switch).
If I understand the article correctly, the woman did not want to go through the body scan because she had a child she was holding. She requested that her hands be swabbed for explosives instead of going through the body scan - which apparently she's savvy enough to know she can opt for instead of the body scan machine (I didn't know that) and I wonder why she didn't opt for the metal detector w/ a toddler. TSA swabbed her hands as she requested and she tested positive for explosives.
Once she's positive for explosives she represents a threat, IMO. She presumptively has explosives on herself - so were did she hide them? They ask her to set the child down, which she does, but then, contrary to what she's been told to do, she picks the child back up. Her excuse is she was apparently unable to hand of her child to her husband because he for an unknown reason went to a different line (suspicious in and of itself as most family groups go through the line together.)
Now it is likely that the false positive was caused by a false positive (glycerin in baby wipes?) but she chose the swab rather than the body scan.
I'm no fan of TSA, but when it comes to someone testing positive for explosives I don't want them on my plane unless TSA knows for sure they do not have any.
The simple answer is choose the body scan next time.
No, they really don't. They don't even do a mediocre job. They are horrible. And contribute absolutely nothing to actually making those planes any safer.The TSA does a great job...
If I understand the article correctly, the woman did not want to go through the body scan because she had a child she was holding. She requested that her hands be swabbed for explosives instead of going through the body scan - which apparently she's savvy enough to know she can opt for instead of the body scan machine (I didn't know that) and I wonder why she didn't opt for the metal detector w/ a toddler. TSA swabbed her hands as she requested and she tested positive for explosives.
Once she's positive for explosives she represents a threat, IMO. She presumptively has explosives on herself - so were did she hide them? They ask her to set the child down, which she does, but then, contrary to what she's been told to do, she picks the child back up. Her excuse is she was apparently unable to hand of her child to her husband because he for an unknown reason went to a different line (suspicious in and of itself as most family groups go through the line together.)
Now it is likely that the false positive was caused by a false positive (glycerin in baby wipes?) but she chose the swab rather than the body scan.
I'm no fan of TSA, but when it comes to someone testing positive for explosives I don't want them on my plane unless TSA knows for sure they do not have any.
The simple answer is choose the body scan next time.