Yeah, right. A 767 heading to LA from Boston "accidently" veers hundreds of miles off course and just happens to slam into a New York City skyscraper.
Whoops!
Answering my own question....
According to reports by the Homeland Security Department's inspector general and congressional auditors, bomb-screening machines do a much better job detecting weapons in checked baggage if they're integrated with airports' in-line baggage-handling systems.
But only eight airports have done that.
In May, the Transportation Security Administration wasn't electronically screening all checked bags for bombs at airports, as Congress ordered. At some airports, the agency hasn't been able to screen 100 percent of checked baggage 100 percent of the time for hundreds of consecutive days, congressional investigators say.
TSA Acting Assistant Administrator Randy Null told the congressional subcommittee that half weren't complying with the law because of equipment problems and half because of staffing shortages or lack of trained screeners.
http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/mld/myrtlebeachonline/business/9238580.htm
"accidently" veers hundreds of miles off course
Don't this this course change amount to "hundreds" of miles.