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TSA wrecks Texas caribou hunters meat
The Anchorage Daily News ^ | May 31st | Craig Medred

Posted on 05/31/2003 9:23:39 PM PDT by ContentiousObjector

Alaska caribou hunter is livid after airport security damages meat U.S. Transportation Security Administration is investigating

By CRAIG MEDRED Anchorage Daily News

(Published: May 31, 2003)

Caribou hunter David Williams arrived home in Houston, Texas, from an Alaska adventure in March to find a nasty surprise from the U.S. Transportation Security Administration.

When Williams cut open the strapping tape holding shut the first of two wet-lock boxes full of carefully handled, carefully packaged caribou roasts, steaks and burger, he found inside a mess and a preprinted form from the TSA informing him his airline baggage had been "inspected.''

The inspection, in this case, involved slicing open 45 packages of caribou double-wrapped in freezer paper and marked "roast,'' "backstrap'' and "caribou hamburger.''

Two months later, Williams is still mad about it.

"This baggage inspection was not done in my presence,'' he said. "Therefore I don't know if the meat was stacked on the floor during the 'prohibited item search.' Was any of it swabbed by chemicals for explosive detection? Did any bomb-sniffing dogs lick the caribou meat? Did the TSA inspectors wear new, previously unused rubber latex gloves while handling our tenderloins, or had they just finished handling someone's dirty underwear?

''The value of this caribou meat is about $28 per pound, and we are afraid to eat it. Would you eat it?''

Appeals to the airlines that hauled the meat brought no response, Williams added. They said it's not their fault.

And the Houston hunter, a former Alaska lodge owner, has had trouble getting any response out of the TSA.

TSA Alaska director Ken Jarman on Friday said he had only recently heard about what happened and begun investigating. He is, he added, determined to get to the bottom of the incident. He said he was almost as shocked as Williams at what happened.

"I'm a hunter and fisherman, too,'' Jarman said.

Cutting open packaged game meat or fish is against both TSA policy and procedure, he added.

Baggage inspectors on the X-ray line in Anchorage aren't even allowed to slice packages open if the alarm goes off on a bag there, he said. And in Kenai, where there is no X-ray, baggage checkers hand-inspecting bags are supposed to pass fish and game meat -- not cut it up.

"I feel badly about this,'' Jarman said. "It is under investigation. We are looking into it.''

He also offered assurances to the many anglers now beginning to ship fish south from Alaska that they shouldn't have to worry about the sort of bad experience endured by Williams, who has cooled down somewhat from the day he opened the first meat box in his garage.

"I opened the first box, and that was the first time I knew anything because they had retaped the box,'' he said. "I was irate. I was glad I couldn't get a hold of somebody when I opened that box. I had to cool down before I did anything I was so upset.''

Williams suspects the meat-slashing took place at the Kenai airport, where he first boarded a commercial flight upon returning from a caribou hunt in the Iliamna area. He was participating in a special winter hunt the state Board of Game established several years ago to try to trim the growing Mulchatna caribou herd before it overtaxes its range.

Williams said he was glad to have the opportunity.

Going to Alaska to hunt and fish, he said, "is my favorite thing to do. I don't bowl. I don't play golf. We usually go up in June and again in July. I went up early to get a caribou. I hadn't been up in winter in a long time, and we were out of meat.''

Williams said he plans to come back soon to fish, even though the March trip left him angry. Mainly, he said, he wants the government to get the baggage-inspection system fixed in Alaska. He has, he said, shipped meat and fish through major airports across the country and never had a problem like this.

"I'm trying to make a little stink about it,'' Williams admitted. "If nobody says anything, it just gets worse.

"Something needs to be changed so all of that stuff is scanned and not cut open. I have taken meat through the Houston airport and asked that it be scanned, and it has passed perfectly through a scanner.''

Similar scanners, Jarman said, are now being used for everything in Anchorage. And he's trying to get scanners for Kenai. Inspectors there, at the moment, are still hand-inspecting, but they are not supposed to slice anything open.

Williams wonders about that.

"The government doesn't have any customer service,'' he said.

Jarman, however, assured that the TSA in Alaska will try to act like it does.


TOPICS: Activism/Chapters; Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; US: Alaska; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: 911; airportsecurity; alaska; hunting; terrorism; texas; tsa
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To: cinFLA
I always wear steel toed safety shoes. That way they can take my shoes, and X ray them. I get less harrassement than if they decide to go through my carry on bags.

I have a friend who leaves the north seeking arrow off the first submission of his city architecture drawings. The drones who check drawings stop looking then, and adding the arrow is the easiest correction to make.
101 posted on 06/01/2003 10:20:59 PM PDT by donmeaker (Time is Relative, at least in my family.)
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To: buffyt
DOA DIA is a boondoggle. I went to a wedding in the Denver area (pre-911), and ended up flying into Colorado Springs due to lower airfares (DIA has a significant pax tax). The drive wasn't unpleasant - saved time to visit the USAFA on the return trip.
102 posted on 06/02/2003 5:38:50 AM PDT by Fudd
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To: The Red Zone
I imagine there's a safe way to mail or ship these torches home to yourself. I'm not a smoker, so I've never looked into it.

I imagine part of the problem, for some of these passengers, is they'd probably miss their flight while running around the airport looking for a way to send their prohibited items home.

103 posted on 06/02/2003 9:31:11 AM PDT by 4Freedom (America is no longer the *Land of Opportunity*, it*s the *Land of Illegal Alien Opportunists*!!!)
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To: Trust but Verify
Oh...the TSA won...

They convinced me to never fly on commercial airlines, period.

104 posted on 06/02/2003 9:43:57 AM PDT by B Knotts
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To: snopercod
If they add powdered meat tenderizing seasonings, you might get an alarm off the TSA's ETD machine. I suppose it depends on the ingredients and whether the seasonings get all over the outside of the box in high enough concentrations.

I've been told that if a passenger is carrying nitroglycerin or PETN to treat a heart condition, his baggage will most likely alarm.

105 posted on 06/02/2003 9:57:42 AM PDT by 4Freedom (America is no longer the *Land of Opportunity*, it*s the *Land of Illegal Alien Opportunists*!!!)
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To: donmeaker
I have a friend who leaves the north seeking arrow off the first submission of his city architecture drawings.

Hehe...I use the same technique with building inspectors. Leave something obvious for them to "catch", and they feel like they have earned their pay and don't bother to really delve into things.

106 posted on 06/02/2003 10:05:32 AM PDT by snopercod
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To: Marine Inspector
I passed through Dulles before 9/11 and the screeners were all Middle Eastern and Hispanics. I didn't here ANY English spoken until a belligerent female with a some kind of head covering ordered me to take my laptop apart. I was then pulled out of the line and frisked by a Russian who was actually more polite than the other guys. After 9/11 I went through Dulles again and it was the SAME crew but SHAZAM! they were gubmint employees. Well they did fire a few of them when they found out they had ties to terrorist groups.

In Denver (DIA) there are lots Somalis and Ethiopians that the Mayor imported after a trip to Africa. Talk about RUDE!
107 posted on 06/02/2003 10:32:22 AM PDT by dljordan
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To: donmeaker
The Infiniti I34 has 3 center console compartments nested one within the other. When the airport initiated car searches, they check the first on and said thank you. As he was about to close the door, I asked him if he wanted to search the second. Slighly irritated, he did. As he was about to exit again, I asked him if he wanted to search the third! He said "never mind".....

The next time back at the airport I asked them why they didn't search the bags in the car since anyone could easily remove a "gun or knife" from a piece of luggage after pulling away from the vehicle search station and put it into the "searched" glove compartment.

108 posted on 06/02/2003 2:46:43 PM PDT by cinFLA
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To: eno_
I was not endorsing the TSA. Only saying he should have expected it. I mean, if they are searching 86 year old ladies and taking nail clippers away from people, they are going to look into packages of meat now matter what their internal regs say.

Bottom line is that if the meat was that important, he should have planned for the possibility it would be inspected and taken steps to have it inspected properly.

We do have to take responsibility ourselves sometimes.
109 posted on 06/02/2003 9:54:31 PM PDT by BJungNan
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