Passenger Charges Overweight Seatmate $150 To Sit Next To Him On Flight [Roundup]

News and notes from around the interweb:

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 »

More articles by Gary Leff »

Comments

  1. Once again evidence that America doesn’t have a drug problem. It does however have a drug law problem.

  2. Gary,

    I live in CLT. While I understand that law enforcement often confiscates money or property under questionable pretenses in this case it appears to be warranted. First of all the the money was hidden in clothing to avoid detection (it was only detected by a currency sniffing K9), the man didn’t have a good story which then quickly changed and also authorities looked at his travel history and it fit the profile of a drug mule. He can certainly apply to get the money back but my suspicion is it won’t be done and this is this basically the cost of doing business for this group. On the other hand he, or his family, may have an “accident” due to him losing the money.

  3. @AC – it is not illegal to carry money domestically, or to do so in a concealed manner. he has not been charged with any crime. you do not need a ‘good story’ for carrying the cash, but why do you think his “wasn’t good”..?

    looking at his travel history? that’s idiotic. the DEA considers travel between chicago and los angeles to be flying ‘between two known drug cities.’ he was flying to LA. the travel history is in no way suggestive of criminal activity, and certainly shouldn’t be sufficient for seizing cash in any case.

    “He can certainly apply to get the money back” the process is designed to prevent people from getting most of their cash back, and usually requires them to forego claims of rights violations in exchange for a portion of their money back.

  4. @Gary – I have ZERO problem with using advanced analytics to anticipate and stop potential crime. Sorry if that may offend some of you privacy zealots but the greater good must be served.

    While I realize it is not illegal to carry any amount of cash domestically, multiple courts, including SCOTUS, have given LE the ability to confiscate funds or property related to a crime or reasonably expected to be used for a crime. This fits so get over it please. I will gladly give up some personal freedoms if it cuts down on crime and makes the country safer.

  5. @AC
    I believe it was Thomas Jefferson, who once said something like “if you continue to give up your freedoms for security, soon, you will have neither. “

    The drug laws have been a colossal failure and cause more problems than they fix.

  6. @WileyDog – not sure old Tom Jefferson’s quote is applicable in 2023. Things were a lot different in the late 18th century. Personally I’m all for cameras, tools that can listen in on cell phone calls, geotracking cell phones and movement or any other tool that can put criminals away and deter their actions.

  7. You had a typo: should read “criminals steal $70k from CLT passenger”. Anyone who has not yet recognized that parts of the US government are acting as a criminal enterprise are naive. Because airports fall under federal jurisdiction these thugs can do anything they want with impunity. I’ve seen them interrogating passengers in DET many times, with zero probable cause, just a drag net looking for profits.
    Anyone who doubts this: I suggest checking out a YouTube site called Leto’s Law which has many informative stories on CAF and the inherent corruption therein.

  8. Hmmm. AC sounds like a code name for a drug dealer. Perhaps the DEA should kick in their door and do a little snooping around just in case. A little preemptive policing.

  9. $70K stuffed in his clothes & sleeves? Being transported for “family issues”? Something stinks there. I’ve got no problem with this, and no sympathy for this guy.

  10. I feel that being free means we can do weird things as long as it’s not encroaching on someone else’s rights. And punishment should follow an actual conviction. Perhaps the guy has a weird thing about money. He shouldn’t have to explain or to have a sensical explanation. If they’re truly concerned about a crime, govt should start an investigation based on their suspicion, not just take his stuff. If they’re right, it’ll lead to a much bigger payoff.

  11. Sounds like a creative solution was found. But seriously the COS knows he is a COS and should have purchased 2 seats. If he doesn’t fly it’s his own fault.

  12. Taking Money from the ‘people’ is the business of Government and with the sherfs , prosecutor n and judge in on the conspiracy , it is almost impossible to get it back. You will never have enuf proof tp overcome the Gov ‘s Conspiracy…..

Comments are closed.