Seeing the traveling with ammo thread, I thought it might be entertaining to start a "funny" TSA thread. Not to bash the TSA (because they actually have a pretty challenging job), but this experience (in retrospect) was one of the most hilarious I've ever had. Picture this - I'm doing a fair amount of domestic and international travel around September 11, 2001. A few months after the New York Twin Towers attacks, I was required to travel (again) domestically in connection with my job as a GS-1811 series federal law enforcement officer. This was shortly after the TSA was created and they started the magnetometer screening, etc. I recall this experience specifically because it was the first Southwest flight I had ever been on that the captain met me before the flight and and drug me into the cockpit of the aircraft. This was (evidently) before all aircraft cockpit access doors were fortified. He flopped the jump seat down and told me in no uncertain terms that my job on the flight was to sit in the cockpit with him and the first officer facing the access door to the passenger compartment with my firearm drawn. He directed me that if ANYONE opened the door after it was closed prior to flight, I was to shoot them. Quite the directive. The TSA part of this story goes as such: at that point in time and history, all federal law enforcement officers were allowed to travel armed on domestic flights (this still holds true, by the way). The procedure was that you were required to show up two hours before the scheduled flight departure time, complete a form with the airlines, go through a credentials check and get escorted by a counter agent to the gate where you met with the gate agent handling the flight. When TSA started, the procedure was different in that there was no longer an escort by a counter agent because you had to present the airline form to TSA, which did a second credential check and you had to sign in, get checked by the Port Police and then you were on your way to the gate to meet with the gate agent. Well, I show up at TSA with my armed traveler form correctly completed, present my credentials, sign in, and get shuttled off to meet with the Port Police by a TSA supervisor. As we're walking to meet the Port Police officer, the TSA agent is asking me all sorts of questions about what I have in my possession. When he asked me if I was in possession of any edged weapon, I (stupidly) responded in the affirmative as I had a government-issued Leatherman in my briefcase, which I was carrying in my hand. This TSA guy goes ballistic. You'd have thought I was carrying a nuclear device. Well, after a very long discussion (in front of the Port Police officer) I was required by TSA to surrender my Leatherman tool to the Port Police officer for safekeeping or not be allowed to board the flight. I'll never forget the perplexed look on that officer's face when he said to the TSA supervisor: "You know he has a gun, right?" A real head scratching experience with TSA, for sure.
Any others out there?
Any others out there?
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