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Legal Action Expected in Box Cutter Case
AP ^ | Oct 19, 2003

Posted on 10/19/2003 9:32:56 AM PDT by Leroy S. Mort

WASHINGTON (AP) - Legal proceedings were expected Monday in a federal court in Baltimore against a college student who the FBI believes hid box cutters and other banned items aboard two Southwest Airlines planes, the agency said.

Government prosecutors still were trying to determine what charges they might bring against Nathaniel T. Heatwole. The 20-year-old student had warned officials he would try to bring forbidden articles onto commercial flights to expose holes in security, an official said.

A federal law enforcement official confirmed Saturday that investigators are interviewing Heatwole, of Greensboro, N.C., to learn how he got through airport screeners while also carrying bleach, matches, modeling clay and notes detailing his intention to test security.

A Bush administration official said the suspected perpetrator last month sent the government an e-mail warning of his intention to conceal similar suspicious items on six planes and provided dates and locations for the plan.

Federal authorities ``reviewed the correspondence and determined this individual did not pose an imminent threat to national security,'' said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Heatwole, a junior at Guilford College in Greensboro, told the Greensboro News & Record he had been interviewed by the FBI in connection with the Southwest Airlines incidents Thursday night.

``I have a ton of stuff I'd like to say, but ... I have to work with government before I work with the media,'' Heatwole told the newspaper in an interview from his home in Damascus, Md.

Guilford is a Quaker college with a history of pacifism and civil disobedience that dates to the Civil War.

Heatwole is not a Quaker, but shares many of the tenets of their religion, including a belief in pacifism, according to a February 2002 interview with The Guilfordian, the campus newspaper.

Heatwole refused to register for the draft when he turned 18 as required by law, according to the newspaper. Instead, he returned a blank registration form to the Selective Service System along with a letter explaining his opposition.

``I wanted to let them hear the voice of dissent,'' he said, ``just in case they were listening.''

The suspect was identified through a database search that linked the bags found on the planes to the e-mail, the Transportation Security Administration said.

Southwest Airlines maintenance workers found small plastic bags containing box cutters and other items in lavatory compartments on planes in New Orleans and Houston. Notes in the bags ``indicated the items were intended to challenge Transportation Security Administration checkpoint security procedures,'' according to a statement from Southwest Airlines.

Each note also included precise information about where and when the items were placed on board the aircraft, according to a federal law enforcement official who spoke on condition of anonymity. That information has not been made public, so it's unclear how long the items were aboard the planes.

The discovery triggered stepped-up inspections of the entire U.S. commercial air fleet - roughly 7,000 planes. By Friday night, after consulting with the FBI, the TSA rescinded the inspection order.

No other such bags were found in the inspection.

The aviation security system has undergone enormous changes since the Sept. 11 attacks, in which 19 hijackers used box cutters to take over four planes. Gaps remain, however. Government officials acknowledge X-ray machines can miss plastic explosives and box cutters. Airport workers who have access to planes are not screened, nor is much of the cargo that goes aboard commercial flights.

Undercover federal investigators who recently tested security were able to sneak weapons past screeners.

The modeling clay found aboard the Southwest planes was made to look like an explosive, while the bleach could have been used to demonstrate how a corrosive or dangerous liquid could be smuggled aboard a plane.

Al Aitken, a member of the Airline Pilots' Security Alliance, said if someone can send the government an e-mail about testing the security system ``and then actually do it, then you know the real bad guys can get the appropriate explosive components onto the airplanes for a repeat of the Sept. 11 attacks.''

Associated Press writers Leslie Miller in Washington, Stephen Manning in Damascus, Md., and Martha Waggoner in Raleigh, N.C., contributed to this report.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: airlinesecurity; fbi; guilford; heatwole; nathanielheatwole
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A dollar says this kid ends up speaking at the Democrat Convention.
1 posted on 10/19/2003 9:32:57 AM PDT by Leroy S. Mort
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To: Leroy S. Mort
They're trying to figure out how to charge him with 2 counts of embarassing the FBI, 4 counts of ridiculing TSA, and 3 counts of making airport security look like an international laughingstock.

It's exactly as I predicted: they'll throw the book at this moron, while doing nothing to address the very serious security lapses he revealed. Typical.
2 posted on 10/19/2003 9:45:11 AM PDT by diamondjoe
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To: Leroy S. Mort
Let's hope the government can hold two disparate thoughts in it's head at the same time. First, the TSA is a pork-barrel joke full of incompetent gropers, and second, this little smart-ass needs his butt kicked. Simple as that.
3 posted on 10/19/2003 9:48:39 AM PDT by ctonious
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To: ctonious
I agree the kid is a little brat, but c'mon, he TOLD THEM what he was going to do, and when he was going to do it! And he still go through. Good lord, that is a scary thought to anyone who realizes that your average Al Qaeda op is unlikely to send such detailed messages in advance of an attack.
4 posted on 10/19/2003 9:50:21 AM PDT by diamondjoe
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To: Leroy S. Mort
I'll bet this kid doubles as a computer hacker in his spare time. Same mentality.
5 posted on 10/19/2003 9:52:36 AM PDT by NotJustAnotherPrettyFace
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To: Leroy S. Mort
Imagine if this moron shows up at an Israeli restaurant in Haifa, stands up and opens up his coat showing a belt full of fake dynamite, and says "Ha! You idiots! Lookit how easy it was to- KaBLAM!!" End of smartass lecture - end of smartass.

There are better ways to constructively point out the obvious gaping holes in airport security than panicking the traveling public - and instigating a search of 7000 airplanes.
6 posted on 10/19/2003 9:54:44 AM PDT by ctonious
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To: ctonious
The bottom line to this whole story....this kid will spend 12 months in a fed prison...become gay...write a book on the whole experience...make a million dollars off the whole experience....whilst the Feds do nothing to fix their entire security problem.
7 posted on 10/19/2003 9:59:33 AM PDT by pepsionice
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To: diamondjoe
they'll throw the book at this moron, while doing nothing to address the very serious security lapses he revealed.

What are you talking about? Certainly the TSA will step up their efforts to feel up women, strip search the elderly and loot other passengers of their harmless belongings. This is the Fe'ral Government we are talking about here!

8 posted on 10/19/2003 10:14:48 AM PDT by Dr Warmoose
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To: ctonious
There are better ways to constructively point out the obvious gaping holes in airport security than panicking the traveling public - and instigating a search of 7000 airplanes.

I'm listening... what are they? Apparently the TSA doesn't react to their own investigator's assessments and it takes a punk kid using a rather dramatic (and retrospectively effective) act in order to get the myrmidons to wake-up.

9 posted on 10/19/2003 10:18:46 AM PDT by Dr Warmoose
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To: ctonious
There are better ways to constructively point out the obvious gaping holes in airport security than panicking the traveling public

I wasn't panicked. The second it was news it became obvious not to be panicked. What was the threat? Only a total moron would think that someone who did this was an actual threat to them.

10 posted on 10/19/2003 10:21:22 AM PDT by Rodney King (No, we can't all just get along.)
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To: Dr Warmoose
I'm listening... what are they? Apparently the TSA doesn't react to their own investigator's assessments and it takes a punk kid using a rather dramatic (and retrospectively effective) act in order to get the myrmidons to wake-up.

So - are you saying this is an appropriate way to fix the problem? Are you really...?

11 posted on 10/19/2003 10:22:40 AM PDT by ctonious
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To: Dr Warmoose
Imagine if this moron shows up at an Israeli restaurant in Haifa, stands up and opens up his coat showing a belt full of fake dynamite, and says "Ha! You idiots! Lookit how easy it was to- KaBLAM!!"

And I suppose this would be an appropriate way to point out security problems in Israeli restaurants? Look. We all agree the TSA is full of short-bus morons - but when has it ever helped any of the traveling public to ring their alarm bells in this fashion?

Pulling fire alarms in school hallways - and then loudly carping about how long it took for the fire department to get there is an analogous "technique" of pointing out a problem. Is this appropriate? You tell me....

12 posted on 10/19/2003 10:28:43 AM PDT by ctonious
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To: ctonious
So - are you saying this is an appropriate way to fix the problem?

There is quite some distance in "fixing the problem" and simply "identifying the problem.". Clearly the problem has been identified, the next step is to decide to take action. I believe that this was the main motive for the kid's actions. Panic and fear are traditionally good motivators. A terrified public, shocked into hysteria on 9-11, is what gave us the overreaction and the hundreds of billions dollars spent on this endless war on terrorism. If some doofus with modeling clay and bleach can get people calling their congress critters, at least the "decision to take action" will be in effect.

But by judging how the Fe'ral Government responds to most "problems", the cure is often much more worse than the disease.

13 posted on 10/19/2003 10:48:52 AM PDT by Dr Warmoose
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To: ctonious
Pulling fire alarms in school hallways - and then loudly carping about how long it took for the fire department to get there is an analogous "technique" of pointing out a problem. Is this appropriate? You tell me....

Given the caveat that everyone within the school can't do anything to save themselves until the fire department arrives. But the alarm bells are for those within the building, not for the sake of the FD. When the alarm bells of ineffective TSA agents goes off, We The People should be able to take the appropriate action.

14 posted on 10/19/2003 10:52:47 AM PDT by Dr Warmoose
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To: Dr Warmoose
Panic and fear are traditionally good motivators. A terrified public, shocked into hysteria on 9-11, is what gave us the overreaction and the hundreds of billions dollars spent on this endless war on terrorism. If some doofus with modeling clay and bleach can get people calling their congress critters us the overreaction and the hundreds of billions dollars spent on this endless war on terrorism the traveling public, at least the "decision to take action" will be in effect.
15 posted on 10/19/2003 10:53:59 AM PDT by ctonious
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To: Leroy S. Mort
This kid may be a leftist but the fact of the matter is that he broke through our security.
OUR AIRLINES ARE NOT SECURE!!!!
The feds suck at internal security and this proves it!!!
How far would he have gotten on El Al???
My brother quit doing contract work for the TSA (he installed and repaired baggage security machines) because of the beaurocracy....he was at Detroit Metro during the big blackout this summer. A TSA guy was escorting him through the baggage claim area when the lights went out. Pitch black. No procedures in place.
16 posted on 10/19/2003 11:41:33 AM PDT by baltodog (I'm Polish. I'm left-handed. I'm a drummer. I demand reparations.)
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To: Dr Warmoose
Bump.
17 posted on 10/19/2003 12:13:43 PM PDT by First_Salute (God save our democratic-republican government, from a government by judiciary. (Merge Right!))
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To: First_Salute; blam; aculeus
Update:

Box Cutters on Planes 5 Weeks, FBI Says

18 posted on 10/20/2003 10:07:39 AM PDT by Shermy
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To: ctonious
...this little smart-ass needs his butt kicked.

nathaniel t. heatwole is a true patriot if there ever was one.

give him a medal and kick your own butt.

19 posted on 10/20/2003 2:58:13 PM PDT by jethropalerobber
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To: ctonious
There are better ways to constructively point out the obvious gaping holes in airport security...

name one.

what are you going to do? write a letter to your congressman?

20 posted on 10/20/2003 3:03:40 PM PDT by jethropalerobber
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