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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Mar 2008
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Default TSA Forces Nipple Ring Removal


"HK" wrote in message
...

Security flap arises over nipple ring removal
Washington Times


March 29, 2008

By Audrey Hudson - The Transportation Security Administration (TSA)
yesterday stood by its decision to require a Texas airline passenger to
remove a nipple ring with pliers before boarding a flight, but says more
discreet screening procedures may allow sensitively placed piercings to be
worn in the future.

"TSA acknowledges that our procedures caused difficulty for the passenger
involved and regrets her discomfort with the situation," said TSA
spokesman Christopher White.

"In the future, TSA's procedures will meet the security need while giving
additional flexibility for this kind of screening situation," Mr. White
said. "This could include a visual inspection without removal."

Mandi Hamlin, 37-year-old graphics artist, said she was forced to remove
the nipple ring with pliers on Feb. 24 before boarding Southwest Flight 35
from Lubbock, Texas, to Dallas.

Gloria Allred, Ms. Hamlin's lawyer, read from a letter to the TSA during a
video teleconference Thursday asking the TSA's Office of Civil Rights and
Liberties to investigate the incident.

"After nipple rings are inserted, the skin can often heal around the
piercing, and the rings can be extremely difficult and painful to remove,"
Ms. Allred said in the letter.

"Still crying, she informed the TSA officer that she could not remove it
without the help of pliers, and the officer gave a pair to her," said Ms.
Allred.

"This encounter was one that she will never forget," Ms. Allred said. "The
conduct of TSA was cruel and unnecessary. The last time that I checked a
nipple was not a dangerous weapon."

Mr. White said security screeners properly followed procedures during the
incident when they asked Ms. Hamlin to remove the piercings. One was
removed easily, but the skin had grown over the second piercing stud and
Ms. Hamlin asked for the pliers to remove it.

The TSA defended the extra scrutiny, saying that terrorists have hidden
dangerous items in "sensitive areas of the body" in the past.

"We have a duty to the American public to resolve any alarm that we
discover," Mr. White said. "Incidents of female terrorists hiding
explosives in sensitive areas are on the rise all over the world. This
scenario must be addressed at our nation's airports."

On Nov 28, 2007, in Sri Lanka, a woman linked to the Tamil Tiger terrorist
organization, detonated a bomb from her bra killing herself and one other.

TSA's Web site informs passengers that body piercing may prompt additional
screening procedures and that they may be asked "to remove your body
piercing in private as an alternative to a pat-down search."

"Our security officers are well trained to screen individuals with body
piercing in sensitive areas with dignity and respect while ensuring a high
level of security," Mr. White said.


- - -

Ahh, the Bush Administration. We're going to miss the high level of
incompetence.


Between your spending much of your day participating in rec.boats and
finding exciting news articles like this to regurgitate, it's no wonder you
need to go out in the woods and shoot tree stumps, to relieve the stress you
are under.
BTW: How do you hide a 3 pound pistol on your person. The obvious answer is
that just blends in with your excess midriff blubber.