January 24, 2012

Rand Paul, hero!

Filed under: privacy & security by Victoria Liberty @ 7:07 am

Rand Paul

Photo by Gage Skidmore

Most of the world, I’m sure, has already heard of Senator Rand Paul’s act of courage yesterday, but I must pay tribute to him anyway. At a Nashville, TN, airport, Senator Paul, after already being forced to go through a full-body scanner, was ordered to submit to a pat-down. He refused and was subsequently escorted from the airport by police.

According to Yahoo News:

In a telephone interview with the Associated Press, Paul said that the incident occurred after an alarm went off when he passed through a scanner at Nashville Airport Monday. Paul said the alarm had apparently been triggered by his knee, though “the senator said he has no screws or medical hardware around the joint,” the AP said.

TSA agents refused his request to walk through the scanner again to reconcile the anomaly, and he refused their demand for a pat-down, Paul said.

The Kentucky Senator said that “he asked for another scan but refused to submit to a pat down by airport security,” the AP reported. Paul “said he was ‘detained’ at a small cubicle and couldn’t make his flight to Washington for a Senate vote scheduled later in the day.”

Some may argue that refusing a pat-down isn’t enough to make someone a hero. In my opinion, Rand definitely qualifies for that title because of everything he has done to defend liberty in his life so far. Although what he did yesterday was a small, everyday act, it is things like this that little by little advance the cause of freedom and make the world a better place.

January 18, 2012

TSA admits wrong in overzealous searches

Filed under: privacy & security by Victoria Liberty @ 11:30 pm

In December, two elderly women, in separate incidents, accused the TSA of violating their rights with degrading, excessively intrusive airport security screenings. Now the federal agency is apologizing for what their agents did:

“In an about-face, the feds have admitted wrongdoing in the cases of two elderly women who say they were strip-searched at Kennedy Airport by overzealous screeners.

Federal officials had initially insisted that all ‘screening procedures were followed’ after Ruth Sherman, 89, and Lenore Zimmerman, 85, went public with separate accounts of humiliating strip searches.

But in a letter obtained by the Daily News, the Homeland Security Department acknowledges that screeners violated standard practice in their treatment of the ailing octogenarians last November.”

Read the rest at the New York Daily News.

Although it’s always good for the TSA to apologize for humiliating innocent travelers, they aren’t exactly doing so for the right reason. Both women accuse TSA agents of strip-searching them, but the TSA still denies this and is only apologizing for making Sherman show them her colostomy bag and putting Zimmerman’s back brace through a scanner, both of which are against official policy. As Zimmerman said, ”I don’t have a problem with the back brace. I have a problem with being strip-searched.”

December 4, 2011

Two more TSA fiascos

Filed under: privacy & security by Victoria Liberty @ 4:27 pm

The TSA has gotten some (deserved) bad publicity in the past few days due to a couple of very questionable airport security decisions.

On Thursday, a teenage girl was stopped and ordered to check her purse because it had a gun design on it:

“A teenage girl’s sense of style got her in trouble at the airport.

Vanessa Gibbs, 17, claims the Transportation Security Administration stopped her at the security gate because of the design of a gun on her handbag.”

The agents said that it could be considered a replica weapon, which have been banned on airplanes under federal law since 2002. It’s bad enough for governments to trample on people’s right to bear arms…but now they ban gun designs, too? Ridiculous.

In somewhat related news, an elderly lady is claiming that TSA agents strip searched her at JFK Airport in New York:

“An 85-year-old woman said Saturday that she was injured and humiliated when she was strip searched at an airport after she asked to be patted down instead of going through a body scanner, allegations that transportation security officials denied.

Lenore Zimmerman said she was taken to a private room and made to take off her pants and other clothes after she asked to forgo the screening because she worried it would interfere with her defibrillator. She missed her flight and had to take one 2 1/2 hours later, she said.”

It’s worthwhile to point out that the TSA is denying these allegations…but if they are true, then this is just another example of security gone way too far, at the expense of liberty.

November 7, 2011

Jesse Ventura’s awesome rant against the TSA

Filed under: privacy & security by Victoria Liberty @ 10:07 pm

Last week, sadly, Jesse Ventura’s case against the TSA was dismissed. The former Minnesota governor had filed a lawsuit against the Department of Homeland Security, (correctly) calling the use of airport full-body scanners and pat-downs without probable cause unconstitutional, demeaning, and degrading. He gave quite a press conference afterward, saying that he would never fly again, that he would apply for dual citizenship with Mexico, that he would call our country the Fascist States of America, and that he might even run for president:

“I will not be treated like a criminal. In our airports today, we citizens are treated like criminals. We’re guilty until we’re proven innocent…I will never stand for a national anthem again. I will turn my back and raise a fist the same way Tommy Smith and John Carlos did in the ’68 Olympics, Jesse Ventura will do that today.”

Good for him. If I filed a lawsuit to stand up for my constitutional rights and it was thrown out, I would be mad too!

Watch his speech above, or read and listen at Minnesota Public Radio.

October 15, 2011

Are jail strip searches constitutional?

Filed under: privacy & security by Victoria Liberty @ 8:49 am

This week the Supreme Court heard arguments in the case of Albert Florence. Horrifically, Mr. Florence was wrongly arrested due to a computer mistake for failing to pay a traffic fine, which he had actually paid, and was then thrown in jail and strip searched twice. The Court is deciding whether New Jersey’s practice of strip-searching all inmates who are held in jail before trial is constitutional.

Interestingly, the more “liberal” justices seemed more opposed to strip searches and the more “conservative” ones seemed to lean toward supporting them.

Justice Sotomayor said that much contraband enters jails ”not on intake, but…from corrupt correction officials” and reminded her fellow justices of a very important principle, asking, ”What are we doing with the presumption of innocence? That’s also a constitutional right.”

Justice Kagan contrasted this case with a 1979 decision approving body cavity searches after contact visits, saying, ”Here, you are talking about somebody who is arrested on the spot. There is no opportunity for planning, for conspiracy with respect to contraband.”

Justice Scalia claimed that strip searches were routine at the time the Bill of Rights was ratified. Although I don’t know for sure, that would be very surprising to me. He also implied that it would be okay to strip someone “to see if the person has any fleas or cooties or, you know, any other communicable disease before he is put into the general population.”

My view:

Although jail officials and people who support strip searches do not refer to them as a punishment and do not conduct them for that purpose, being subjected to such a degrading invasion of privacy is unarguably a punishment, and a severe one at that. It is always wrong to inflict punishments on people who have not been convicted of a crime, both from a common-sense point of view and according to the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution, which forbids that anyone ”be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” Heck, you could even argue the more radical position that strip searches, even of people who have been convicted of crimes, are unconstitutional because they are a “cruel and unusual” punishment under the Eighth Amendment.

Looking at the debate from a slightly different angle, using common sense about searches and seizures also makes it clear that strip searching people, when there is no reason to suspect they may be hiding weapons or contraband, is unconstitutional. If someone is arrested, then presumably there is reasonable suspicion that they committed some crime. But the strip search is not related to finding evidence of a crime, it is done for safety and security purposes. If the inmate has done nothing to raise suspicion of smuggling contraband, then there is no reasonable suspicion to conduct a strip search, and it therefore violates the Fourth Amendment. This is even more true when someone is arrested for a minor offense such as failing to pay a traffic ticket.

A lawyer from the Department of Justice told the Court, ”You cannot say that there are some minor offenders that don’t pose a contraband risk. You have individuals who are making (a) very quick determination. They have very little time, and if they guess wrong, those mistakes can be deadly.” But a strip search is a severe violation of a person’s dignity, privacy, and sexual integrity. The burden of justification must always be on those who want to inflict such a violation, and it is certainly not enough of a justification that there is some chance, however small, that the person might have contraband. If you don’t have enough time to figure out which inmates raise a reasonable suspicion, you shouldn’t be searching anyone.

In my opinion, this particular case is a no-brainer. Punishing people in this way, when they must be presumed innocent and have done nothing to raise suspicion, is unconstitutional, and I hope the Supreme Court recognizes this.

October 5, 2011

The TSA apologizes for once

Filed under: privacy & security by Victoria Liberty @ 9:54 pm

As you may have heard, the TSA subjected Lori Dorn – a breast cancer survivor – to a full-body scan and pat-down by agents who ignored her medical information card. She blogged about her experience, and the TSA actually apologized for its treatment of her. She wrote:

“Yesterday I went through the imaging scanner at JFK Terminal 4 for my Virgin America flight to San Francisco. Evidently they found something, because after the scan, I was asked to step aside to have my breast area examined. I explained to the agent that I was a breast cancer patient and had a bilateral mastectomy in April and had tissue expanders put in to make way for reconstruction at a later date.”

“I told her that I was not comfortable with having my breasts touched and that I had a card in my wallet that explains the type of expanders, serial numbers and my doctor’s information (pictured) and asked to retrieve it. This request was denied. Instead, she called over a female supervisor who told me the exam had to take place. I was again told that I could not retrieve the card and needed to submit to a physical exam in order to be cleared. She then said, ‘And if we don’t clear you, you don’t fly’ loud enough for other passengers to hear. And they did. And they stared at the bald woman being yelled at by a TSA Supervisor.”

“We do our best to treat passengers with the dignity and respect they deserve, but in Lori Dorn’s case, it looks like we missed our mark,” the TSA wrote on their official blog. “We sincerely regret and apologize for the experience Mrs. Dorn had at JFK.”

Thank you Lori for standing up to the TSA and actually getting them to admit they were wrong. Visit her blog, her husband’s blog, or follow her on Twitter @HRLori.

September 14, 2011

Airport security atrocity

Filed under: privacy & security by Victoria Liberty @ 10:45 pm

Despite the small steps the TSA is taking to be slightly more respectful of people’s freedoms (eventually no more removing of shoes, reducing pat-downs for kids, non-naked scanners, etc.), stories like the following one show that there is still a long way to go toward restoring liberty in airport security. On September 11, after her flight landed in Detroit, Shoshana Hebshi was, for no apparent reason, handcuffed, interrogated, and strip searched:

“Silly me. I thought flying on 9/11 would be easy. I figured most people would choose not to fly that day so lines would be short, planes would be lightly filled and though security might be ratcheted up, we’d all feel safer knowing we had come a long way since that dreadful Tuesday morning 10 years ago.

But then armed officers stormed my plane, threw me in handcuffs and locked me up.”

I’m thankful to Hebshi and others like her who have taken the time to share their stories of mistreatment by the government and spread awareness of individual liberty. Read the rest of this truly awful story at her blog, and this article at CBS News.

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