Las Vegas Review-Journal

Leave the grenade at home

TSA screeners find lots of unusual stuff

- By Mick Akers Las Vegas Review-journal

Security screeners at airports nationwide discovered a record number of firearms and unusual items in carry-on bags last year — including a grenade found in a bag in Las Vegas.

At least the grenade was inoperativ­e.

In 2018, 4,239 firearms were discovered in passengers’ luggage at security checkpoint­s at 249 different airports, a 7 percent increase over 2017’s total, data released Thursday by the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion revealed.

“Passengers are bringing them (firearms) to airports in higher numbers,” said TSA spokespers­on Lori Dankers. “Officers are pretty good at finding them in the X-ray.”

TSA officers discovered 59

firearms at Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport during routine security screenings of departing passengers’ carry-on luggage last year. Bucking the national trend, the number is a slight drop from 2017, when TSA officers at Mccarran discovered 62 firearms.

The report highlighte­d a handful of unusual items discovered at airports, including the inert grenade discovered in a carry-on bag

Nov. 27 at Mccarran.

Although the grenade was inactive, the discovery of such items can lead to airport complicati­ons.

When a grenade — whether real or inert — or other possible explosive device is discovered, all screening stops at that location until a TSA explosive expert inspects the item. Even inert grenades can lead to

closed terminals and checkpoint­s, which can result in delayed or cancelled flights, according to the TSA.

In the Las Vegas case, Dankers said, experts were able to determine the grenade was inert fairly quickly, avoiding a long-term shutdown of the security area.

“Explosive devices remain the biggest threat to aviation,” she said. “There’s other items as well, and our officers are looking to keep those out of the cabins in our aircrafts.”

Other potentiall­y dangerous items discovered by TSA agents include:

Three smoke grenades Nov. 19 in a checked bag at Nashville Internatio­nal

Airport.

A bottle of lighter fluid Dec. 12 in a carry-on bag at Seattle-tacoma Internatio­nal Airport.

Fireworks Dec. 13 in the carry-on bag at Orlando Internatio­nal Airport.

Five replica mortar shells Dec. 1 in a checked bag at Orlando Internatio­nal Airport.

The grenade found at Mccarran is the latest in a list of unusual items found at the Las Vegas airport.

In 2017, TSA agents discovered a throwing star in a carry-on bag and a replica rifle umbrella. In 2015, a live purple smoke bomb was found in a bag. In 2012, keychains with bullets attached — given out as souvenirs at the SHOT Show — were confiscate­d from several travelers.

Firearms can be transporte­d on a commercial aircraft only if they are unloaded, packed in a locked, hard-sided case and placed in checked baggage, according to the

TSA. They are not permitted in carry-on luggage, even if a traveler has a concealed weapon permit.

Ammunition and firearm parts, including firearm frames, receivers, clips and magazines, are also prohibited in carry-on baggage and must be checked.

In addition to being fined, passengers caught with prohibited items could face legal action, which is at the discretion of each law enforcemen­t agency.

If a passenger brings a firearm to a security checkpoint, the TSA will levy a civil penalty as high as $10,000. The average penalty is around $950, Dankers said.

“It’s an expensive mistake,” she said. “Oftentimes you may lose the firearm and you are delayed and may miss your flight.”

Contact Mick Akers at makers@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-2920. Follow @mickakers on Twitter.

 ?? Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion ?? TSA screeners found this inert grenade in a bag Nov. 27 at Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport.
Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion TSA screeners found this inert grenade in a bag Nov. 27 at Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport.

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