TSA Lets Delta Passenger Board With Meat Cleaver — Says Screeners ‘Weren’t Sufficiently Trained’ To Catch It

A passenger at the Portland airport walked a meat cleaver through TSA on Thursday evening, boarded a Delta Air Lines flight to Salt Lake City, and finally someone noticed there was a large bladed weapon in the cabin.

A flight attendant reported the “hazardous item,” everyone was ordered off the aircraft and re-screened, and the flight left roughly two and a half hours late. No one was arrested.

TSA’s response so far is the usual formula: they “take this matter very seriously” and will “review the incident” and says they will pursue “appropriate corrective action that could include additional training of the security screening workforce.”

  • Walking a prohibited weapon through security into the sterile area and onto an aircraft can be both a TSA civil violation and a criminal one.
  • The lack of an arrest suggests investigators did not see an immediate threat – and that pursuing this would likely be more embarrassing for TSA than anything else.

Normally knives make it to TSA checkpoints when someone puts a kitchen knife or cleaver in a bag for a picnic or other event and then reuses the same bag for travel without thinking. Passengers show up at checkpoints with pocketknives and firearms saying they “forgot” these were in the bag. Some travelers carry blades because they feel safer with a weapon, and these infrequent flyers are blissfully unaware of screening rules.

TSA has a long history of missing most of the contraband going through security checkpoints. When various internal testing revealed 90%+ miss rates over a period of years, the TSA simply stopped releasing this data, treating it as sensitive security information. In the past, anything close to a ‘win’ has been trumpeted beyond credulity by the agency. Their continued silence on performance speaks volumes.

Most likely, local TSA leadership will write up an incident report. There could be additional training for screeners involved. There may be a short-term emphasis on x-ray image review and “threat recognition” refreshers for that checkpoint. But that’s likely it.


TSA Agents in Charlotte Watch News of the TSA’s Failure to Detect Weapons and Bombs, Instead of Searching for Weapons and Bombs (HT: Tocqueville)

Screeners in Portland, as at other airports, have just worked through the government shutdown with pay deferred, and are still waiting to be made whole financially (though many reportedly will receive large bonsues as well). There’s no indication that this played a role in the general incompetence. Expect them to investigate themselves and find themselves blameless.

Agents will happily pull a jar of peanut butter and a bottle of water, and toss those ostensibly dengarous items in a bin beside the checkpoint (rather than calling for a hazmat team). Yet they manage to miss a literal meat cleaver. It’s a flight attendant who caught it. That’s the ‘multiple layers of security’ TSA talks about it seems, with airline crew the layer that actually worked.

About Gary Leff

Gary Leff is one of the foremost experts in the field of miles, points, and frequent business travel - a topic he has covered since 2002. Co-founder of frequent flyer community InsideFlyer.com, emcee of the Freddie Awards, and named one of the "World's Top Travel Experts" by Conde' Nast Traveler (2010-Present) Gary has been a guest on most major news media, profiled in several top print publications, and published broadly on the topic of consumer loyalty. More About Gary »

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Comments

  1. If you vote someone to be the president that has 34 felonies what is considered illegal or even intolerable?

  2. Meanwhile, a smaller than a credit card sized multifunction tool (flat) which was a promo giveaway item at a conference was seized as one of the edges was jagged. ‍♂️. Maybe they were afraid I’d fix a loose screw.

  3. Bottles of water are evil. Toothpaste is an abomination. Sunscreen will kill us all. At least we no longer have to take our shoes off

  4. Interesting to know if said meat cleaver went through TSA inside a carry-on. If that is the case, for it to have been noticed inside the cabin one assumes it would have had to be removed from the bag or the bag opened to view at very least.

  5. If TSA screening is so ineffectual, how is it that there’s not been another 9/11? Jus’ sayin’ ….

  6. And what they trumpet as a win isn’t always so clear. A pilot told me about how they said they had interdicted “two explosive devices” from someone about to board his plane. It was a hunter who forgot a couple of leftover shotgun shells.

  7. Mike, yes, we need screening at the airport, but box cutters were not prohibited items at the time of the 9/11 attacks. You can’t blame the private screeners for a “miss” in that case. I’d say that the main reasons that there haven’t been more mass attacks are good intel work, targeted special ops actions, and a terrorist population that’s presently on it’s back foot.

  8. Screening needs to be done through AI and human beings can do secondary inspections on anything the AI rejects. Looking at bag after bag is a numbing activity. That being said, missing a manchette?

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