Where do they find these people: TSA blows whistle on it’s own airport security tests
Email This Post
Print This Post
Abstract: Mike Restovich, assistant administrator of the Transportation Security Administration’s (TSA) Office of Security Operations, tipped off TSA airport security staff regarding specifics of a test being conducted of airport security staff on April 28, 2006.
Post: I flew to Boston a week ago last Sunday for training related to my vocation and returned home last Friday. So then I get this email from a friend regarding the TSA and another bureaucratic misstep. I am sure he just wanted to reassure me on how professional TSA is (not). Thanks.
Here’s the article from msnbc.msn.com from November 2nd entitled, “TSA thwarts its own undercover security check“:
The Transportation Security Administration touts its programs to ensure security by using undercover operatives to test its airport screeners. In {at least} one instance, however, the agency thwarted such a test by alerting screeners across the country that it was under way, even providing descriptions of the undercover agents.
The government routinely runs covert tests at airports to ensure that security measures in place are sufficient to stop a terrorist from bringing something dangerous onto an airplane. Alerting screeners when the undercover officer is coming through and what the person looks like would defeat the purpose.
But that’s exactly what happened on April 28, 2006, according to an e-mail from a top TSA official who oversees security operations.
In an e-mail to more than a dozen recipients, including airport security staff, the TSA official warned that “several airport authorities and airport police departments have recently received informal notice” of security testing being carried out by the Department of Transportation and the Federal Aviation Administration.
The e-mail from Mike Restovich, assistant administrator of TSA’s Office of Security Operations, relayed an alert that described a couple who were testing security. The woman is white but has “an oriental woman’s picture” on her identification card, it stated. “They will print a boarding pass from a flight, change the date, get through security (if not noticed) and try to board a flight and place a bag in the overhead.”
Because the pair had altered the date on a boarding pass, the e-mail advised: “Alert your security line vendors to be aware of subtle alterations to date info.”
The TSA inspector general is investigating the incident, and the agency would not discuss details of the case because it’s part of an ongoing investigation.
TSA spokeswoman Ellen Howe said, “We are confident in the overall integrity of the program. Tip-offs are not a systemic problem because we do so much testing.”
Lawmakers are asking for more details on the incident as well.
“Any effort to undermine the integrity of covert testing of TSA’s screening checkpoints is unacceptable,” Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., wrote in a letter Thursday to TSA Administrator Kip Hawley. Thompson chairs the House Homeland Security Committee.
Now aren’t you glad we do not have screeners from those damn private companies anymore. I mean they were so unprofessional. You just have to believe we are getting our money’s worth with TSA. BTW, Thompson is the same moron, err, representative, that champions passage of H.R. 1955, the “Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act of 2007.” You’re really on top of it, Bennie!
To redpills.org home page.
The image used in this post was obtained from HERE and is basically unaltered. This article is copyright © 2007, by Gary Shumway. Permission is hereby granted to reproduce and distribute it electronically and in print, other than as part of a book and provided that mention of the author’s web site www.redpills.org is included. (Email notification is requested.) All other rights reserved. Gary Shumway is the author of Winging Through America and SCUBA Scoop.
Email This Post
Print This Post

