Mom
- TSA Treated My 4-
year-old Like a Terrorist
24
April, 2012
A Montana lawmaker is furious after the four year old daughter of one of his constituents was labeled a “high security threat” when the child hugged her grandmother at a security checkpoint at Wichita Mid-Continent Airport
Michelle Brademeyer, of Missoula, Mon., wrote about the incident on her Facebook page alleging TSA officers called for backup after her daughter would not stop crying and at one point was ordered to spread her legs
.
Rep.
Denny Rehberg (R-MT) told Fox News that he is outraged over the
four-year-old’s treatment.
“Something
is clearly very wrong if TSA’s protocol forced them to harass a
four-year-old girl until she cried,” Rehberg said. “I intend to
sit down with the TSA immediately and demand some answers.”
The
TSA confirmed to Fox News that an incident occurred at the airport —
but defended the way their officers handled the situation.
“TSA
has reviewed the incident and determined that our officers followed
proper current screening procedures in conducting a modified pat-down
on the child,” said Sterling Payne, of the TSA Office of Public
Affairs.
The
Brademeyer family’s ordeal began at Wichita Mid-Continent Airport
after they had cleared a security checkpoint. Brademeyer’s mother,
who happened to be traveling out of the same airport, set off an
alarm and had to be re-screened.
Brademeyer’s
four year old child was so excited to see her grandmother that she
ran over to give her a brief hug. At that point, a TSA officer began
yelling at the child and demanded she sit down and undergo a full
body pat-down.
“It
was implied, several times, that my mother, in their brief two-second
embrace, had passed a handgun to my daughter,” Brademeyer wrote on
her Facebook page.
She
said her daughter was terrified.
“They
told her she had to come to them, alone, and spread her arms and
legs,” Brademeyer wrote, noting that her daughter began screaming
“No, I don’t want to.”
“That
is when a TSO told me they would shut down the entire airport, cancel
all flights, if my daughter was not restrained,” she wrote. “It
was then they declared my daughter a ‘high-security threat.’”
Brademeyer
said she tried to pick up her daughter and comfort her but the TSA
ordered her to stop. They were eventually escorted to a private room
where she said her daughter was treated like a terrorist.
“I
will never forget the look of pure terror on her face,” she said.
“A TSO began repeating that in the past she had ‘seen a gun in a
teddy bear.’ The TSO seemed utterly convinced my child was
concealing a weapon, as if there was no question about it.”
However,
the TSA disputes Brademeyer’s claim that officers thought her child
had a gun.
“TSA
officers did not suspect or suggest the child was carrying a
firearm,” Sterling said in his statement to Fox News.
At
some point her daughter started crying again and that enraged TSA
officers, she said. They ordered her to stop weeping and when she
refused, the TSA called for backup.
“Two
TSOs called for backup saying, ‘The suspect is not cooperating.’
the suspect, of course, being a frightened child. They treated my
daughter no better than if she had been a terrorist.”
Eventually,
a manager intervened and determined the child could be cleared
through security after the harrowing ordeal.
“My
daughter is very shaken up about this, and has been waking up with
nightmares,”
Brademeyer wrote. “What should have been a very
minor, routine security check was turned into a horrific ordeal. All
of this could easily have been prevented if the TSO involved had used
a little bit of compassion and a smidgen of common sense. There is no
reason for any child to go through this.
“And
while I completely understand the necessity of tight airport
security, I fail to see how harassing a small child will provide
safety for anyone,” she wrote.
Rehberg
blamed the debacle on the Obama Administration, saying they have
“ignored common sense in favor of mind-boggling bureaucratic
rules.”
“Common
sense tells you there’s a way to protect air travelers without
harassing and scaring them,” he said.
But
he TSA remains steadfast that they did absolutely nothing wrong.
“TSA
has recently implemented modified screening procedures of children 12
and under that will further reduce the need for a physical pat-down
for children,” Sterling said.
“These new screening procedures
include permitting multiple passes through the metal detector and
advanced imaging technology to clear any alarms as well as the
greater use of explosives trace detection. These changes in protocol
will ultimately reduce – though not eliminate – pat downs of
children.”
“In
this case, however, the child had completed screening but had contact
with another member of her family had not completed the screening
process,” he added.
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