Orlando Sentinel

Let travelers sue abusive TSA agents

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Most Americans are far likelier to be searched by an agent of the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion than by an FBI agent. But according to a federal appeals court, if an FBI agent violates your rights you can file a lawsuit. If you’re manhandled by a TSA employee you’re out of luck.

By a 2-1 vote, the U.S. 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelph­ia has ruled against Nadine Pellegrino, a business consultant from Boca Raton, who claimed that a search of her belongings at Philadelph­ia Internatio­nal Airport in 2006 was too rough and invasive. She was arrested and charged with assault after she clashed with TSA agents, but was found not guilty. She then filed a lawsuit against the TSA and the individual An appeals judge in agents. Philadelph­ia ruled against

The appeals court’s decision a Boca Raton woman turned not on the truth or falsity who sued the TSA for of Pellegrino’s allegation­s but on what she claimed was an a question of how a law called the

invasive search. Federal Tort Claims Act should be interprete­d. The TSA should not be

Generally, the federal government immune to legal is immune to lawsuits sanctions. under the doctrine of “sovereign immunity.” But the Federal Tort Claims Act creates various exceptions, including one allowing citizens to sue “investigat­ive or law enforcemen­t officers” for civil wrongs including false arrest, false imprisonme­nt and malicious prosecutio­n.

Writing for the majority, Judge Cheryl Ann Krause said that TSA agents didn’t qualify because the searches they performed were “administra­tive.” The judge suggested that if searches by TSA agents could give rise to lawsuits, so could other routine searches by government officials, such as those carried out by meat inspectors and employees of the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion.

Yet Krause conceded that airport screenings are particular­ly invasive because they “may involve thorough searches of not only the belongings of passengers but also their physical persons — searches that are even more rigorous and intimate for individual­s who happen to be selected for physical pat-downs after passing through a metal detector or imaging scanner.” She suggested that although current law didn’t authorize lawsuits against TSA agents in her view, Congress could pass a law allowing them.

We disagree [with Krause’s interpreta­tion of the law]. The judge’s cramped reading of the law seems to miss the point of what TSA agents do. And it denies recourse to people who are abused by them.

Most TSA agents do their jobs diligently and courteousl­y. But those who take advantage of the sometimes intimate contact they have with the traveling public shouldn’t be immune to legal sanctions. If the courts won’t recognize that, Congress should step in.

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