Fan Mail?
When TSA inspectors go through your luggage before
you board the plane, they're supposed to look, not leave anything,
right? Seth Goldberg says that when he opened his suitcase in San
Diego after a flight from Seattle earlier this month, the two "No
Iraq War" signs he'd picked up at the Pike Place Market were still
nestled among his clothes.
But there was a third sign, he said, that shocked him.
Tucked in his luggage was a card from the Transportation
Security Administration notifying him that his bags had been opened
and inspected at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. Handwritten
on the side of the card was a note, "Don't appreciate your
anti-American attitude!"
"A Little Orwellian"
"I found it chilling and a little Orwellian to have received
this message," said Goldberg, 41, a resident of New Jersey.
Goldberg says that when he took his suitcase off the airplane in
San Diego, the zipper pulls were sealed with nylon straps, which
indicated TSA had inspected the luggage. It would be hard, he said,
for anyone else to have gotten inside his bags.
TSA Investigates...
TSA officials say they are looking into the
incident. "We do not condone our employees making any kind of
political comments or personal comments to any travelers," TSA
spokeswoman Heather Rosenker repotedly said. "That is not
acceptable."
Goldberg, who is restoring a historic home in New Jersey, said
he picked up the "No Iraq War" signs because he hadn't seen them in
New Jersey and wanted to put them up at his house.
"In New Jersey there's very little in the way of protest and
when I got to Seattle I was amazed how many anti-war signs were up
in front of houses," he said. "I'm not a political activist but was
distressed by the way the country was rolling off to war."
Goldberg said he checked two bags at Sea-Tac on March 2 and
traveled to San Diego on Alaska Airlines. The TSA station was
adjacent to the Alaska check-in counter.
...But Is Skeptical
TSA Spokesman Nico Melendez said the note in
Goldberg's luggage will be investigated, but he said there's no
proof that a TSA employee wrote it. "It's a leap to say it was a
TSA screener," Melendez said.
But Goldberg said, "It seems a little far-fetched to think
people are running around the airport writing messages on TSA
literature and slipping them into people's bags."
He says TSA should take responsibility and refocus its training
"so TSA employees around the country are not trampling people's
civil rights, not intimidating or harassing travelers. That's an
important issue."