TSA "blue" it at EWR. Boxcutters.

NYCFred

Senior Insider
TSA staff jet blew it

By PHILIP MESSING

Last Updated: 12:12 PM, March 2, 2011

Posted: 2:16 AM, March 2, 2011

A passenger managed to waltz past JFK's ramped-up security gantlet with three boxcutters in his carry-on luggage -- easily boarding an international flight while carrying the weapon of choice of the 9/11 hijackers, sources told The Post yesterday.

The stunning breach grounded the flight for three hours Saturday night and drew fury from Port Authority cops, who accused the Transportation Security Administration of being asleep on the job.

"In case anyone has forgotten, the TSA was created because of a couple boxcutter incidents," said one PAPD source, referring to the weapons used by al Qaeda operatives to commandeer the jets they later slammed into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon on 9/11.

The two TSA agents and supervisor who completely missed the blades at a security checkpoint "will all be disciplined and undergo remedial training," said spokeswoman Ann Davis.

(I suppose firing their sorry @sses is impossible????comments mine)

The incident happened at around 10 p.m. Saturday as factory worker Eusebio D. Peraltalajara, 45, of Jersey City waltzed past the screeners on his way to a Dominican Republic-bound flight, the sources said.

Agent Ahmir Wilkerson, supervisor Anthony DeJesus and at least one other screener allowed his carry-on luggage -- with the boxcutters with razor blades -- to pass through the X-ray machine, police sources said.

Once aboard Santiago-bound Flight 837, flight attendant Fausto Penaloda, 40, asked him to stow his luggage in the overhead storage bin.

As Peraltalajara's shoved it into the compartment, Penaloda saw the boxcutters fall out of the bag, according to a police report.

He grabbed the boxcutters and alerted the captain and first officer.

They called JetBlue security, which raised the alarm to PAPD Emergency Service Units, the Joint Terrorism Task Force and the FBI, sparking an evacuation of the plane's 136 passengers and five crew members.

The PAPD's Canine Unit swept the plane for bombs and all of the passengers had to be rescreened.

Peraltalajara told authorities that he used the boxcutters for work at a Secaucus manufacturing plant and simply forgot that they were in his luggage. He was not charged with any crime.

The TSA spokeswoman Davis insisted that the traveling public was not at risk.

"There have been a number of additional security layers that have been implemented on aircraft that would prevent someone from causing harm with boxcutters," she insisted.

"They include the possible presence of armed federal air marshals, hardened cockpit doors, flight crews trained in self-defense and a more vigilant traveling public who have demonstrated a willingness to intervene."

philip.messing@nypost.com

NEW YORK POST
 
Wendi already did that a few years back...from MHT through EWR to DEN...she was due to fly back to Denver that day...a huge delivery showed up as she was trying to leave the shops..so she grabbed a box cutter and quickly helped to open the boxes...in the rush rush a box cutter ended up in her bag...went right through MHT security no problems...spent an hour in the "sterile" area of EWR with box cutter in her bag...went to get something from her bag and discovered the item....

walked into our home in Colorado ski country, I was cooking dinner....said to me "look what I just flew across the country with?"...and whipped out a 6 inch boxcutter


it was a joke then..and it still is
 
Heh, a friend has been traveling with one to five of them, ~100 flights a year, mostly in the US.

As he lives in California, he's most recent reports have been more about the cannabis cultivation license he recently acquired for 20$. Just 99 plants, though. He's digging into the "co-ops" doing the legal cultivation business and other details..

Some time ago he and a friend took 15 long-haul flights and took 100 mg of Viagra the moment the plane took off. Not a single time they had any jet lag at the destination.
 
I flew all around the US with a folding pruning saw tucked into my briefcase a few years ago. They finally found it (much to my surprise) in Denver. Last time a let a co-worker borrow sharp instruments from me at work :)
 
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