Chattanooga Times Free Press

US airport security nabs 6,542 guns in 2022

- BY REBECCA SANTANA

ATLANTA — The woman flying out of Philadelph­ia’s airport last year remembered to pack snacks, prescripti­on medicine and a cellphone in her handbag. But what was more important was what she forgot to unpack: a loaded .380-caliber handgun in a black holster.

The weapon was one of the 6,542 guns the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion intercepte­d last year at airport checkpoint­s across the country. The number — roughly 18 per day — was an all-time high for guns intercepte­d at U.S. airports, and is sparking concern at a time when more Americans are armed.

“What we see in our checkpoint­s really reflects what we’re seeing in

society, and in society there are more people carrying firearms nowadays,” TSA administra­tor David Pekoske said.

With the exception of pandemic-disrupted 2020, the number of weapons intercepte­d at airport checkpoint­s has climbed every year since 2010.

Experts don’t think it is an epidemic of would-be hijackers — nearly everyone caught claims to have forgotten they had a gun with them — but they emphasize the danger even one gun can pose in the wrong hands on a plane or at a checkpoint.

Guns have been intercepte­d literally from Burbank, California, to Bangor, Maine. But it tends to happen more at bigger airports in areas with laws more friendly to carrying a gun, Pekoske said. The top-10 list for gun intercepti­ons in 2022 includes Dallas, Austin and Houston in Texas; three airports in Florida; Nashville; Atlanta; Phoenix; and Denver.

Pekoske isn’t sure the “I forgot” excuse is always true or whether it’s a natural reaction to getting caught. Regardless, he said, it’s a problem that must stop.

When TSA staffers see what they believe to be a weapon on the X-ray machine, they usually stop the belt so the bag stays inside the machine and the passenger can’t get to it. Then they call in local police.

 ?? AP PHOTO/BRYNN ANDERSON ?? People wait for their belongings Jan. 25 at the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion area at the Hartsfield­Jackson Atlanta Internatio­nal Airport.
AP PHOTO/BRYNN ANDERSON People wait for their belongings Jan. 25 at the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion area at the Hartsfield­Jackson Atlanta Internatio­nal Airport.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States