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A MYSTERY IN THE SKIES (Michelle Malkin tells of a foiled airline terror plot)
Michelle Malkin's Blog ^ | January 14, 2005 | Michelle Malkin

Posted on 01/15/2005 3:34:16 AM PST by Stoat

A MYSTERY IN THE SKIES

 

By Michelle Malkin   ·   January 14, 2005 10:58 PM

 

Physician blogger Dr. Bob says one of his patients, a federal air marshal, told him about a foiled hijacking involving boxcutters hidden in overhead luggage bins:
He and his partner were assigned to a flight (the airline, airport, and destination were not disclosed) in their customary undercover security role. They boarded the airplane early in order to meet the flight attendants, at which time the cleaning crew was still on the airplane -- somewhat longer than expected. My patient and his partner sat together in seats near the middle of coach class.

The passengers began to board, and he and his partner noticed a single Middle Eastern man sitting near the front of first class. After a number of passengers had boarded, two Middle Eastern men walked by this man and made eye contact, but said nothing. They sat down together in the front of coach class. Shortly thereafter, two other Middle Eastern men also walked by the man in first class and made eye contact without speaking. They sat near the back of coach class.

Shortly after the flight attendants completed their post-boarding check of the overhead bins, an announcement came from the cockpit: the pilot stated that there had been a security breach, and everyone needed to deboard the plane for a second, more thorough, security screening. The Air Marshall and his partner were confused, as they had not triggered the security alert nor been notified of it prior to the announcement.

After all the passengers had deplaned, the Federal Air Marshalls checked with the flight attendants for more information. During a final check of the overhead bins, a flight attendant had noticed that one of the blankets was slightly unfolded, and he repositioned it in the bin. At this time, a razor blade fell out of the blanket. Concerned, but still believing this might be a straightforward mistake, the flight attendant began to check other overhead bins. Several additional incompletely folded blankets were noted, and hidden in each one was a box cutter: a total of five. It appeared that these had been placed there by the cleaning crew prior to the boarding of the airplane.

After the repeat security screening, the passengers reboarded -- all except the five Middle Eastern men, who were nowhere to be found. The flight proceeded to its destination uneventfully.

 

It's hard to imagine, in a post-9/11 world, that terrorists would attempt another attack with box cutters. Also, Dr. Bob's patient did not disclose specifics--airport, airline, destination, etc.--that would facilitate confirmation. If anyone can provide more information, drop me a line.

Whether or not the story is true, it highlights at least two important policy questions:

1. What kind of security measures are being undertaken with regard to clean-up crews and other ground personnel with access to airplanes?

2. Why does FAMS director Tom Quinn continue to enforce idiotic pre-boarding policies that expose marshals' identities to observant passengers?

Update: The idea that terrorist operatives might be trying to smuggle razor blades as weapons onto planes is not pure fantasy. Last April, Pakistani illegal alien Fazal Karim was convicted on charges of carrying and attempting to carry concealed dangerous weapons in air transportation and of making false statements about his immigration status. Security officials at Dallas/Ft. Worth airport found 32 double-edged razor blades tucked in a coiled belt inside a cardboard box in Fazal Karim's carry-on luggage.

 

Assistant U.S. Attorney Fred Schattman argued that Karim carried out a test run to aid terrorism. The Ft. Worth Star Telegram reported that security officers first noticed that Karim appeared to distance himself from his carry-on bag. After placing the bag on the conveyor belt leading to an X-ray machine, Karim did not walk through the adjacent magnetometer but selected one farther away. He offered FBI agents three different explanations for the blades, Schattman said. First, Karim said he used the blades to shave the bottom of his full beard. Then he said they were for a friend in Houston. Finally, he said he did not know the blades were in the bag. More:

At a hearing in November, a federal agent testified that the names and phone numbers of the current directors of the civil aviation systems in Pakistan and the United Arab Emirates were found in Karim's address book _ 10 years after he worked as a computer programmer for the Pakistan Civil Aviation Authority.

"It was indicative of his familiarity with air transportation security systems," Schattman said. "We believe he was testing security measures."

 

In addition, I've found at least one other mention of a flight crew member discovering razor blades in blankets.

Weird. Scary weird.

Update II: Reader Eric makes some additional, on-target points...

For me at least, there is another lesson in this story.

You will note that the breach in security was discovered by responsible, observant individual citizens, not the government officials who were there at the time.

We have seen this time and again, with the passengers on the plane that crashed in PA, the cabin attendant who spotted the terrorist with a bomb in his shoe, and on and on.

I believe that true security rests in the individual vigilance of a proud and free people who are not dependent on a nanny state to look out for their welfare or safety. I hope you agree.

Arm the pilots, arm the cabin crew, arm law-abiding citizens. I will be the first in line to buy tickets on such an airline.



TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: airline; airlinesecurity; airportsecurity; hijacking; hijackingplot; hijackingplots; islam; islamofascism; isolatedincidents; malkin; michellemalkin; razorblades; terror; terrorism
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To: SpyGuy

Amen!
Whether it's called "racial profiling, criminal profiling, or behavioral profiling" it's a valuable tool in fighting crime...that's why so many leftist loonies are so much against it.....it works!


41 posted on 01/15/2005 4:38:44 AM PST by yer gonna put yer eye out (Gettin' a PhD at FR...(PrettyHard on Democrats))
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To: durasell

There are a few people at this site who are enraged if you don't agree and then throw out the infamous DU label. And notice they didn't read the article and realize that the author herself questioned whether the story was true or not.


42 posted on 01/15/2005 4:40:17 AM PST by lindor (If con is the opposite of pro, is Congress the opposite of Progress?)
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To: Stoat

"Arm the pilots, arm the cabin crew, arm law-abiding citizens. I will be the first in line to buy tickets on such an airline."

Oh God. I'm so going to get shot to death the next time I sneeze in a plane. Does anyone have a Greyhound ticket I can borrow?


43 posted on 01/15/2005 4:42:50 AM PST by batenkaitos
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To: Stoat

I knew a “Ricky”, and these days who knows?


44 posted on 01/15/2005 4:43:55 AM PST by R. Scott (Humanity i love you because when you're hard up you pawn your Intelligence to buy a drink.)
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To: batenkaitos
I think the vital factor in doing stuff like this is to conduct such things in as dignified and polite a manner as possible--I'm a little (okay, I'll be honest...very!) bitter because of the manner in which I was treated during that incident. The staff was incredibly rude, refused to answer my questions, and pretty much left me to clean up the mess they made after emptying out my bags, with nary an apology or offer to help figure out my new flight plans.

The airport security needs to get off of their dead asses and onto their dying feet. If they'd search more thoroughly in the beginning it would greatly reduce this kind of thing. They shouldn't have been rude like that. Once the cavity search yielded them nothing they should have apologized for the delay and helped you get on your way.
45 posted on 01/15/2005 4:44:20 AM PST by Jaysun (DEMOCRATS: "We need to be more effective at fooling people.")
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To: Stoat

Yes, I did read that excerpt... I am not saying that razor blades haven't been found and I'm not saying that they won't injure when used as a weapon, what I am saying is that the passengers are going to fight to the finish THIS TIME (in otherwords; the terrorists are bringing a knife to a gun fight).

I realize that isn't the guist of your post...

Is testing by America's enemies, of our aviation security systems/operations underway ? Likely...

Is the blog/blogger a bearer of truth... ah... honestly, I don't know.


46 posted on 01/15/2005 4:46:26 AM PST by freepersup (find the enemy... destroy the enemy... remain vigilant)
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To: Stoat
uhhhhh.sorry, it looks like to me that this story again illustrates the failure of the TSA.

Why this is being shown as a positive reflects an effort of the media to polish the failures of the TSA...once again.

47 posted on 01/15/2005 4:52:44 AM PST by Khurkris (That sound you hear coming from over the horizon...thats me laughing.)
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To: Jaysun

"Once the cavity search yielded them nothing..."

God, I'm never going to stop hearing about that one.


48 posted on 01/15/2005 4:53:06 AM PST by batenkaitos
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To: batenkaitos
 
"Arm the pilots, arm the cabin crew, arm law-abiding citizens. I will be the first in line to buy tickets on such an airline."

Oh God. I'm so going to get shot to death the next time I sneeze in a plane. Does anyone have a Greyhound ticket I can borrow?

The last time I checked, sneezing hasn't been linked to being an Islamofascist intent on slicing a stewardess' throat and flying planes into buildings.  Don't worry...legally armed citizens are usually among the nicest and most law-abiding folks that you might care to meet, and they take the responsibilities of gun ownership extremely seriously.

As to Greyhound, please consider that on a bus you are also dealing with a closed, metal container with people who are going to be screened far more loosely than airline passengers, which, like an airplane you can also not escape from when it's in motion.  Furthermore, you have only ONE driver and no stewardesses.  The bus driver is also NOT behind a solid door and is easily available for victimization....which happens frequently.

It seems to me that a bus would be a far easier hijacking target than an airplane....it also is far easier to drive.

As for myself, I prefer the freedom and grandeur of the Great American Highway.  Any Islamofascist carjacker (or any other sort) will be dealt with swiftly and decisively.  :-)

49 posted on 01/15/2005 4:54:46 AM PST by Stoat
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To: lindor; durasell
There are a few people at this site who are enraged if you don't agree and then throw out the infamous DU label. And notice they didn't read the article and realize that the author herself questioned whether the story was true or not.

They didn't read the article??? Who is "they". That, my friend, is gossip... and inflammatory.

I normally do not refer others to DU (I have only visited one time, and decided it was too fruity, for me...), but in your case...

I responded to the post, which I read as mocking a serious problem, and poo-pooing the articles writer. What's your purpose?

50 posted on 01/15/2005 4:56:31 AM PST by pageonetoo (I could name them, but you'll spot their posts soon enough.)
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To: Khurkris
uhhhhh.sorry, it looks like to me that this story again illustrates the failure of the TSA.

Why this is being shown as a positive reflects an effort of the media to polish the failures of the TSA...once again.
 

Sorry?  No need for that...I agree completely.

51 posted on 01/15/2005 4:56:57 AM PST by Stoat
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To: batenkaitos
"Once the cavity search yielded them nothing..."

God, I'm never going to stop hearing about that one.


You already know that they've got an extra eye on you, and another cavity search is likely. So you should have a little fun with it next time. Maybe hide a couple of toy cars up there or something.
52 posted on 01/15/2005 4:57:51 AM PST by Jaysun (DEMOCRATS: "We need to be more effective at fooling people.")
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To: lindor
Wasn't there a Dr. Bob character on television?

Yes. Dr. Bob (Rowlf), Nurse Piggy, and Nurse Janice were all Muppets staffing the Sesame Street Veterinarian's Hospital.

Color me "skeptical". Maybe "Dr. Bob" here is a psychiatrist. Or a patient.

53 posted on 01/15/2005 5:00:28 AM PST by Sooth2222
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To: SpyGuy
" It's "criminal profiling."

Excellent distinction and one which everyone should keep in mind when the inevitable critics of sensible security procedures emerge with their shouts of "Racism".

54 posted on 01/15/2005 5:01:06 AM PST by drt1
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To: freepersup
Is the blog/blogger a bearer of truth... ah... honestly, I don't know.

As Michelle Malkin herself points out in the story, she isn't claiming it to be definitively true but it's entirely plausible, has substantiated precedent and is sourced FAR better than many that have graced the front pages of the New York Times.  She's merely putting the information out there and asking for corroboration, which is something that many other 'reporters' don't seem terribly interested in doing.

I only view it as something worth reading and considering.  If I run across another well-sourced article debunking this one then I'll post it in this thread as well.

55 posted on 01/15/2005 5:03:38 AM PST by Stoat
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To: pageonetoo; durasell
Sorry to say this, but I had the same thoughts as Durasell. Dr. Bob's blog reads like a vaguely familiar urban legend. I'm not saying it didn't happen or couldn't happen but I'm not about to accept the truth of what amounts to double hearsay when Ms. Malkin cannot even verify the accuracy of the blog.

Here's what I find most suspicious (in addition to the vaguely familiar ring): Dr. Bob leaves out details like the date, airport, airline, and flight, apparently to protect the identity of his source, who is supposedly an air marshal assigned to that flight. I suspect, however, that if the incident is true, it is not a routine occurrence and therefore, TSA would need about thirty seconds to identify the blabbermouth. I also note that Ms. Malkin wrote about the incident not in her syndicated column, but in her own blog, which suggests to me that she has a healthy degree of skepticism.

BTW, I've been a member of FR almost as long as you, and I have thousands of posts to prove that I belong here, so please don't accuse me of being a DU sympathizer just because I disagree with you.

56 posted on 01/15/2005 5:03:44 AM PST by Labyrinthos
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To: Stoat
After the repeat security screening, the passengers reboarded -- all except the five Middle Eastern men, who were nowhere to be found. The flight proceeded to its destination uneventfully.

So whatever happened to those five? We need to know the rest of the story.

57 posted on 01/15/2005 5:04:39 AM PST by SamAdams76
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To: SamAdams76
So whatever happened to those five? We need to know the rest of the story.

I'm beginning to think that the story is (cough) bullsh*t.
58 posted on 01/15/2005 5:05:58 AM PST by Jaysun (DEMOCRATS: "We need to be more effective at fooling people.")
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To: jazzlite

Bump


59 posted on 01/15/2005 5:07:27 AM PST by Constitutional Patriot (Socialism is the cancer of humanity.)
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To: Stoat

Yeah, but at least people don't get sucked out of the window if a bullet pierces a Greyhound window

Oh wait, I was thinking of a James Bond movie.

Anyway, I'm pretty much against anyone but an air marshall having guns on a plane. I mean, hell, everyone's already dealing with fearing terrorists/crappy peanuts/crying babies/smelly toilets/coffee nerves on the flight. It'd be mere seconds before someone got killed for putting their seat too far back. Heh.


60 posted on 01/15/2005 5:07:32 AM PST by batenkaitos
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