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Will The TSA Close This Dangerous Loophole That Puts Everyone At Risk?
Townhall.com ^ | July 16, 2019 | Scott Morefield

Posted on 07/16/2019 3:45:26 AM PDT by Kaslin

Everyone who flies has been through it. The long lines. Emptying pockets. Removing your belt and/or jewelry. Taking laptops and electronics out of your suitcases or bags. Having your bag randomly searched or, worse, being subjected to a “random” body patdown. If you’re at a large airport, maybe you’ll get lucky and a bomb-sniffing dog will be there to make the line go twice as fast and save everyone from having to step on everyone else’s foot fungus - but if not, foot fungus it is. And heaven help you if you wore white socks or, God forbid, no socks at all. 

Everything that involves going into an airport has been carefully, meticulously planned, from the aforementioned shoe checks to how much shampoo can be carried in a bottle. Passengers are subjected to a full body scan and, should something amiss show up, are patted down to determine whether it’s an odd clothing fold or something more sinister. Sure, stuff still sneaks through, but it’s not for lack of trying. And one thing is absolutely certain, if you don’t go through the rigamarole, you aren’t getting in, period. 

Unless, of course, you’re an airport vendor or employee, or a tray of “specially blessed” food.

A Fox News report on “Tucker Carlson Tonight” earlier this month revealed a crazy TSA airport security loophole that you could drive a mack truck through, literally. That’s right, vendor trucks currently drive through U.S. airport gates unchecked or only partially checked by the agency that bends over backwards to make sure YOU don’t bring more than 3.4 ounces of shampoo on the plane

The report by Fox News correspondent Hillary Vaughn featured former federal air marshal and whistleblower Robert MacLean, who said he was blocked from doing random “open and look” checks because the airline food inside trucks were “specially blessed.” That’s because the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority (MWAA) police and TSA at Washington D.C.’s Dulles Airport apparently gives out “special exemptions” to food trucks “serving planes headed to the Middle East.” When MacLean tried to look into a catering truck’s cargo bay, an MWAA police officer told him the “specially blessed airline meals have already been searched by an off site private security company.”

Not the TSA, but a “private security company.” Let that sink in.  

During this surprise multi-agency law enforcement event called “Operation Guardian”, MacLean says he was on a TSA Visible Intermodal Prevention and Response (VIPR) team that receives $49.8 million annually. VIPR was established after the Madrid, Spain 2004 train terrorist bombings.

Further, MacLean was told by Regional Supervisory Air Marshal in Charge Clyde Porter that “the reason why we don’t break these seals [on the meals] and do open and look checks is because the public has religious rights under the First Amendment.”

“In MacLean’s disclosure,” Vaughn said on air, “the former air marshal testified that he was told by TSA leadership to stand down, follow the local airport police authority, and to not open or look in the cargo hold of the food truck.”

While the TSA said in a statement to Fox News that the “catering carts and trucks are inspected to ensure that security threats are not contained within,” then “sealed for an additional security layer” under the agency’s “rigorous inspection and testing program,” the definition of “are inspected” apparently means ‘inspection’ by private security companies hired by foreign airlines which are only technically required to check half the items, but not everything. 

“It’s security theater,” MacLean said. “We are spending all this manpower and hours patting down children and elderly veterans in wheelchairs but the airport workers who could be motivated by greed can smuggle whatever it needs past security.”

It’s an easily exploitable loophole that any would-be terrorist would undoubtedly welcome.

Internal TSA documents obtained by Fox News revealed that 150 out of 212 catering facilities failed TSA audits because employees didn’t follow security protocol. Further, Fox News wasn’t aware of any catering facilities that search employees themselves or their property before entering the facility.

“And once it arrives at the airport,” Vaughn said, “the TSA doesn’t double check, even though their truckload of food will soon be airborne.”

While the matter is thankfully being investigated by multiple agencies, including the Senate Homeland Security Committee and the TSA itself, the Fox News report did immediately lead to the issuance of an internal TSA memo attempting to address the situation by recommending that TSA employees, not just airline workers and contractors, be included in searches.

Meanwhile, the road for MacLean himself hasn’t been easy. Since leaving the agency in March, the TSA has attempted to discredit him, he explained to me. Ten days after he emailed an inquiry about the religious exemption, TSA locked him out of his office and ordered him to seek and pay for a private psychiatric examination, which he passed. After failing to have him mentally committed, a TSA manager accused him of being an unaccountable “white male.” Finally, TSA fired him for “misogyny” after he posted two media articles about a once-fired TSA employee exchanging sexual affairs with a manager who fired MacLean the first time. She would keep her job and later become a federal air marshal training instructor in MacLean’s Washington, DC field office.

TSA waited to fire MacLean after U.S. senators were blocking President Trump’s U.S. Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB) nominees for over a year. Twenty days after the MSPB became powerless to save whistleblowers, and after deliberating for 10 months, Clyde Porter fired MacLean, he said, mitigating none of the 12 accusations against MacLean.

Describing his experience, MacLean said: “There is no accountability of managerial misconduct. When they’re caught red-handed wasting taxpayer dollars or endangering passengers, they’re simply reassigned or rewarded and the whistleblowers are given cash settlements to early retire and forever leave TSA. TSA won’t fire bad bosses because it's too afraid of them exposing even more high-level wrongdoing during litigation.”


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: airlines; retaliation; security; tsa; whistleblower

1 posted on 07/16/2019 3:45:26 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Wow, this makes me feel so confident about leaping onto planes. (Not.)

It looks like the Obama administration left the TSA deeply corrupt...along with all of the other corruption O left behind.


2 posted on 07/16/2019 3:51:40 AM PDT by exDemMom (Current visual of the hole the US continues to dig itself into: http://www.usdebtclock.org/)
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To: exDemMom

That is why he is the worst president ever


3 posted on 07/16/2019 3:57:19 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Sounds more and more like the decision I made in 1996 to never fly commercial again was a correct choice.


4 posted on 07/16/2019 3:59:07 AM PDT by upchuck (No muzzy is fit to hold public office - their cult (religion) is incompatible with the Constitution.)
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To: exDemMom
Well, let's be fair: the TSA and its imbecility was a product of George W. Bush (who was as imbecile a president as any).

Although Obama and "Big Sis" did make things much worse than they already were.

5 posted on 07/16/2019 4:31:49 AM PDT by Ciaphas Cain (Polls don't lie, but liars poll.)
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To: Kaslin

“the public has religious rights under the First Amendment”
You know they’re not talking about the public. They mean muzzies. They would not bother sealing kosher food. But for muzzies, nothing is too good.

Why did we elect Trump? PC still rules.


6 posted on 07/16/2019 4:46:32 AM PDT by I want the USA back (The further a society drifts from the truth, the more it will hate those who speak it. Orwell.)
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To: Kaslin

Seems to me this sort of thing was reported on several years ago regarding the people that work out on the tarmac and other areas near the plane.

When called on it, we were told that while a few smaller airports do check airport/airline personnel, it is ‘just not practical’ in large, busy airports.

Although there was outrage for a couple of days, we never heard anything about it again. Did anything change? Doubtful.

These lapses in security are nothing new. There has been plenty of time to do it right (which, by the way, is the Israel way).

Maybe, just possibly, the true purpose for the tsa, cameras, etc., are not for the ‘security’ of Americans at all?


7 posted on 07/16/2019 4:57:37 AM PDT by MichaelCorleone (Jesus Christ is not a religion. He's the Truth.)
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To: Ciaphas Cain

Do not put that on George W. Bush. He fought against the creation of the whole DHS but Congress, wanting to be seen “doing something” forced it through.

https://www.cato.org/publications/commentary/abolish-department-homeland-security


8 posted on 07/16/2019 4:58:15 AM PDT by wbarmy (I chose to be a sheepdog once I saw what happens to the sheep.)
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To: MichaelCorleone

>>Maybe, just possibly, the true purpose for the tsa, cameras, etc., are not for the ‘security’ of Americans at all?

And wiretapping the public, scanning and storing emails, and building a mammoth database farm isn’t for the security of Americans either.

The domestic terrorist attacks we’ve seen have all been known wolf attacks, persons who’d even been interviewed by the FIB for the extremist rants and views they’ve espoused.

Fort Hood, Boston, Orlando, San Bernadino. The FIB sat outside and watched as 2 jihadists attempted to storm the “Draw Mohammed” contest in Irving Texas and did not notify the organizers of that event that there was any threat.

Security my ass.


9 posted on 07/16/2019 5:04:57 AM PDT by a fool in paradise (Denounce DUAC - The Democrats Un-American Activists Committee)
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To: Kaslin


10 posted on 07/16/2019 6:11:36 AM PDT by Bonemaker (invictus maneo)
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To: wbarmy
Do not put that on George W. Bush. He fought against the creation of the whole DHS but Congress, wanting to be seen “doing something” forced it through.

The halfwit signed it.

11 posted on 07/16/2019 7:43:24 AM PDT by BlackbirdSST (Is it time Claire?)
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Thank you for bringing attention to my disclosures. I initially emailed my complaint to my TSA chain-of-command on September 26, 2017—almost 2 years ago.

Here’s more information about TSA’s second quest to fire me after beating its appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court 7-2 in 2015:

http://www.maclean-scotus.info

Sincerely,
Robert J. MacLean


12 posted on 07/16/2019 8:58:50 AM PDT by Robert J. MacLean
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To: exDemMom

Remember the TSA under Dubya? How many hijabbed Somali women in TSA uniforms do you remember seeing back then?


13 posted on 07/16/2019 9:04:54 AM PDT by Boogieman
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