How The TSA Respects Women
Lisa Simeone emailed me:
Sommer Gentry is an Associate Professor of Mathematics at the U.S. Naval Academy. A couple of years ago, she was sexually assaulted by a TSA agent. Since then, she refuses to be scanned or groped. Surprise surprise, she knows one of the most recent arrestees in the TSA Sex Crimes Hall of Fame.
Sommer Gentry blogs at the anti-TSA TSANewsBlog:
In November, I was barred from my flight at Dulles Airport for a double opt-out. I refused to go through a blue-box backscatter (x-ray) body scanner, and I refused to endure an intimate feel-up from a woman I didn't know. The body scanners at Dulles have no privacy filter. Backscatter machines dose passengers with carcinogenic ionizing radiation to create images of their naked bodies for inspection by a screener working in the hidden viewing booth.What I sensed was happening at that airport - targeting young women for special security attention out of sexual motivation - now seems even more difficult for the TSA to deny. Not one, but two of the men working for TSA at Dulles Airport on that day have now been arrested for sex crimes.
Just three days after my refusal, police arrested a Dulles screener, Harold Rodman, and charged him with aggravated sexual battery, object sexual penetration, forcible sodomy, and abduction with intent to defile. His accuser says that he flashed his TSA badge to initiate the assault before he lured her away from her friend and attacked her.
I can have no proof, of course, that alleged rapist Harold Rodman was in the viewing booth that morning, but neither can I be assured that he was not. He was employed as a screener at that airport on the same day that another male screener directed me into the scanner while sending my husband through a simple metal detector.
But surely the TSA must have its house in order with regard to how it treats women? At the very least, if Harold Rodman or other screeners were indeed targeting women, then someone higher up in the organization, say, a Transportation Security Manager, would be there to correct the situation?
In fact, a Transportation Security Manager did present himself at the checkpoint that day to see to it that I was either electronically strip-searched or sexually fondled to his satisfaction. That man's name was Bryant Livingston. I still have his card on my desk.
Bryant Livingston, TSA Security Manager, was arrested at Dulles Airport and charged with five counts involving prostitution. He was allegedly running a prostitution ring out of a Silver Spring hotel room. Law enforcement officers found four men and three naked women in a room. One man admitted to police he had arrived with the promise of sex for $100.
This is how the TSA respects women.
Gentry is right on with this:
The TSA is well aware that its procedures involve sexually invasive touching and processing sensitive nude images. True, most screeners charged with serious sex crimes are fired and lose government immunity for shoving their hands down strangers' pants. But if the TSA's vaunted behavior detection program were anything more than a fistful of make-believe, it could use this program to get rid of the sexual abusers on TSA's payroll.







Wow. While the whole thing is good, the last bit is profound.
Haakon Dahl at March 29, 2012 7:46 AM
Amy, this looks interesting. I haven't even read the linked report, but the write-up and extract is plenty interesting. Heaven knows the guy's blog post is spot-on.
Haakon Dahl at March 29, 2012 7:53 AM
But we were born free.
David L. Burkhead at March 29, 2012 8:08 AM
TSA response: Why do you support terrorism and hate America?
Michael Z. Williamson at March 29, 2012 8:25 AM
What do you call one TSA agent and one TSA manager arrested for sex crimes?
A good start. (Well, actually a tepid start, but we'll go with what we can get.)
David L. Burkhead at March 29, 2012 8:27 AM
What do you call one TSA agent and one TSA manager arrested for sex crimes?
Too little, too late.
nonegiven at March 29, 2012 8:47 AM
No one - especially the government - has immunity from the people.
Savvy Traveler at March 29, 2012 9:42 AM
They should have punished the shit out of these children.
Crid [CridComment at gmail] at March 29, 2012 1:05 PM
I have no doubt that the TSA singles out young cute women for special attention, having seen that at work in San Diego. Let me ask a favor, though: don't take your eyes too far off the ball. What TSA does is a violation of everyone who goes through their checkpoints.
Cousin Dave at March 29, 2012 6:59 PM
I know two personal anecdotes do not a pattern make, but I recently took a trip and was picked for the scan both flights. I am cute, blonde, young looking and 7 months pregnant. At the first airport, the TSA screeners tried to convince me the scanner was totally safe. Gee, I think I'll pass on having my unborn baby be your science experiment (not to mention giving some dude in a booth a look at my big belly and swollen boobs). Both ladies who gave me the pat down were nice and kept it as uncreepy as it can be to get touched all over by a complete stranger. Turns out, there is a baby in my belly, not bombs.
Lindsayloo at March 30, 2012 12:03 AM
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