'This Is Not Right'

June 1, 2005 
 
By Kevin Reece 

http://www.komotv.com/stories/37150.htm

DES MOINES - Cecilia Beaman is a 57-year-old grandmother, a principal at
Pacific Middle School in Des Moines, and as of Sunday is also a suspected
terrorist.

"This is not right," she told us. It's not right!"

This past weekend she and several other chaperones took 37 middle school
students to a Heritage Festival band competition in California. The trip
included two days at Disneyland.

During the stay she made sandwiches for the kids and was careful to pack the
knives she used to prepare those sandwiches in her checked luggage. She says
she even alerted security screeners that the knives were in her checked bags
and they told her that was OK.

But Beaman says she couldn't find a third knife. It was a 5 1/2 inch bread
knife with a rounded tip and a serrated edge. She thought she might have
lost or misplaced it during the trip.

On the trip home, screeners with the Transportation Security Administration
at Los Angeles International Airport found it deep in the outside pocket of
a carry-on cooler. Beaman apologized and told them it was a mistake.

"You've committed a felony," Beaman says a security screener announced. "And
you're considered a terrorist."

Beaman says she was told her name would go on a terrorist watch-list and
that she would have to pay a $500 fine.

"I'm a 57-year-old woman who is taking care of 37 kids," she told them. "I'm
not gonna commit a terrorist act." Beaman says they took information from
her Washington drivers license and confiscated and photographed the knife
according to standard operating procedure.

She says screeners refused to give her paperwork or documentation of her
violation, documentation of the pending fine, or a copy of the photograph of
the knife.

"They said 'no' and they said it's a national security issue. And I said
what about my constitutional rights? And they said 'not at this point ...
you don't have any'."

KOMO News did reach a spokesperson with the Transportation Security
Administration for comment. They said they did not have record of Beaman's
confrontation but did admit that TSA screeners are, by design, becoming more
strict.

Despite continued warnings to passengers, TSA screeners say travelers
continue to bring banned items in their carry-on luggage. Knives, guns, and
other weapons are found and confiscated daily.

Fines issued for knives and other sharp objects range from $250 to $1,500.
Fines issued for firearms discovered in carry-on luggage range from $1,500
to $7,500.

The TSA web site also indicates firearms violations will be referred for
potential criminal prosecution. The same site does not propose the same
criminal referral for knives like the one Cecilia Beaman was carrying.

"This is not the way my country should be treating me," she said. My concern
is that if that's the way they're treating American citizens I would hate to
think how they're treating other people. It's crazy."

The TSA reminds travelers that is has the authority to impose civil
penalties up to $10,000 per violation.

"TSA needs the help of the traveling public in reducing the number of
prohibited items brought to airport screening checkpoints," reads the
Sanction Guidelines section of the TSA web site. "TSA recognizes that most
passengers who carry prohibited items do so without any ill intent. TSA does
not impose fines on the vast number of passengers who inadvertently carry
prohibited items. Dealing with any prohibited item, however, adds time to
the screening process both for the traveler who brought the item and for
other travelers as well."

You can find a complete list of banned items, range of fines levied for
violations, and information on how to plead your case with the TSA at
www.tsa.gov.



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