This article finally brings to mainstream media what many of us in the
security space have been saying for the past few years about how easy it is
to spot federal air marshals and why that endangers them both personally and
makes it easier for an adversary to plan ways to counter this "new and
improved tool of homeland security."

Malkin has two major blog entries filled with comments from air marshalls
agreeing with her -- the article that "started it all" appears below.

-rick


AIR RAGE
By Michelle Malkin   �   December 23, 2004 06:13 AM
http://michellemalkin.com/archives/2004_12.htm

AIR RAGE, PART II
By Michelle Malkin   �   December 24, 2004 05:30 AM
http://michellemalkin.com/archives/2004_12.htm


The air marshals' mess
Michelle Malkin (archive)
http://www.townhall.com/columnists/michellemalkin/mm20041215.shtml

December 15, 2004

Can you imagine if an al Qaeda bureaucrat had ordered the 19 Sept. 11
terrorists to wear "I heart Osama" T-shirts when they embarked on their
murderous flights?

 No idiot would send his men on a covert mission wearing clothes that would
so blatantly give them away, right?

 Wrong. Meet Federal Air Marshal Service Director Thomas Quinn. The man in
charge of our in-flight cops, who are supposed to be spying secretly on
would-be terrorist hijackers, refuses to allow his employees to dress
undercover. Quinn insists that air marshals abide by military-style grooming
standards and a rigid business dress policy regardless of weather, time of
year or seating arrangement. He wants them to look PROFESSIONAL.

 That means collared shirts and sports coats -- even if a pair of marshals
is traveling in coach from Los Angeles to Orlando.

 As The Washington Times recently reported, Quinn blew his top on
Thanksgiving when he spotted nearly 30 marshals at Reagan National Airport
in Washington, D.C., in violation of his insipid dress code. Some were
reportedly threatened with suspension.

 This nonsense has been going on for two years. The result is that the
federal government has not made air travel any safer, and is instead
endangering the people who are supposed to be protecting us. The Federal Law
Enforcement Officers Association, which represents over 22,000 federal
agents including air marshals, notes that civilian passengers have publicly
outed marshals on countless flights since the Sept. 11 attacks. Air marshals
have recounted receiving thumbs-ups and thanks from travelers nationwide. No
doubt al Qaeda's operatives who are surveilling flights are mumbling thanks
under their breath, too.

 Indeed, on an infamous American Airlines Flight 1438 from Chicago to Miami,
two air marshals, dressed conspicuously in their professionally mandated
suits, received the following greeting from a passenger walking down the
aisle: "Oh, I see we have air marshals on board!"

 Another air marshal working out of the Las Vegas field office, who wished
to remain anonymous out of fear of retaliation, told the government watchdog
group Airline Passengers for Safer Skies (APSS): "Under the current policies
of Director Quinn, airline passengers are actually safer flying on aircraft
that do not have air marshals on them." Marshals refer darkly to Quinn's
dress requirements as the "kill-me-first dress-code policy." The Las Vegas
field officer remarked: "If all the passengers know we are carrying the guns
on the plane, then so do the terrorists -- we just don't want to get our
throats slit."

 Quinn's response to critics? Kill the messengers! As online journalist
Annie Jacobsen reported in September, the air marshals service threatened to
take action against the passenger who pointed out the marshals made
vulnerable by Quinn's own dress-code policy. The passenger, Quinn protested,
had disclosed "sensitive security information." Meanwhile, according to
APSS, Quinn himself participated in a NBC Nightly News segment that revealed
classified and sensitive information on marshals' boarding procedures,
credentials, equipment and look-out criteria.

 Quinn spent two decades at the Secret Service before taking over the air
marshals service, which may explain his dangerous fashion taste for the Men
in Black uniforms. According to several sources inside the agency, Quinn has
used his position to hire several former Secret Service cronies -- who have
plenty of experience guarding high-profile politicians and celebrities, but
no clue about what it takes to blend in and be effective watchdogs in the
air.

 There is reportedly a provision in the intelligence reform bill passed last
week that will put Quinn's kill-me-first dress policy on ice. But it's not
enough. If President Bush wants to rescue airline safety from the abysmal
national joke that it has become, the first thing he should do is fire
Thomas Quinn before the end of the year. How many more people will die
before we learn that bureaucracy and security don't mix?

Michelle Malkin is a syndicated columnist and maintains her weblog at
michellemalkin.com




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