Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Security addressed after shooting

Travel and mental health policies at heart of discussion

- By Anthony Man Staff writer aman@sunsentine­l.com or 954-356-4550

Critical policy questions that arose in the hours after the Jan. 6 shooting at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood Internatio­nal Airport remained unanswered Tuesday as Broward’s top elected officials huddled with law enforcemen­t and aviation experts. Among them: Should travelers be allowed to check firearms on the planes on which they travel? If so, should they be allowed to pick them up at baggage claim or go through a more secure process to retrieve their weapons?

Should ammunition be allowed in checked baggage on planes, or should gun owners be forced to ship it separately or buy it at their destinatio­ns?

Should the secure areas at airports that require identifica­tion and screening be expanded? If not, is more money required to station more police in the unsecured areas, such as baggage claim?

Should the U.S. have a single standard for evaluating the mental health of people who might prove dangerous?

U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Weston, whose district includes the airport; Broward Mayor Barbara Sharief, representi­ng her fellow county commission­ers; and Broward Sheriff Scott Israel, whose agency provides law enforcemen­t at the countyowne­d airport, said those were among the subjects discussed at a roundtable at the sheriff ’s headquarte­rs.

Media representa­tives were allowed in briefly to take photos of the 17 political, law enforcemen­t and aviation leaders around a large conference table. The discussion, which lasted almost two hours, was private. The principals later met with reporters to describe their thinking.

Israel described the session as “very productive. We talked about so many salient issues.”

Wasserman Schultz said she wouldn’t “just start rapid filing legislatio­n” in Washington. Instead, she plans to take “a step-bystep approach. This is not about grandstand­ing or making knee-jerk decisions.”

Wasserman Schultz said many of her constituen­ts “have expressed great surprise” that people can travel with firearms in checked bags and said it is “a question that needs to be addressed.”

“I really need to understand why we aren’t banning firearms in the belly of an airplane. And ammunition. Ammunition is explosive. That to me is dangerous in and of itself,” she said.

Sharief said the ability of people to check weapons is a subject that warrants “some serious considerat­ion.”

Israel has long been outspoken on the widespread availabili­ty of guns.

“I’m for anything that makes it harder or more difficult to have guns in airports, or schools, or anywhere else,” he said.

But, as for continuing to allow checked weapons, Israel said: “That’s a great question. I really haven’t given that part much thought.”

The sheriff suggested that wouldn’t have prevented the shooting that killed five and injured six.

“If a person is predispose­d to commit mass murder in a cowardly, reprehensi­ble fashion, if they can’t do it in an airport, they’re going to find somewhere else to do it,” he said. “If he wasn’t able to get on a plane and come to Fort Lauderdale, I believe he would have done it in Alaska or someplace else.”

Gary Rasicot, chief of operations at the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion, said the question of checking weapons is not a decision for his agency. He said it would be up to Congress to make that call.

The shooter, Esteban Santiago, had undergone a mental health evaluation in Alaska, where he was living before traveling to Fort Lauderdale.

“Obviously this individual had some very serious challenges,” Wasserman Schultz said. “Even though he had been logged into the mental health system, they hadn’t been caught.”

Santiago was a National Guardsman who had been deployed to Iraq. Wasserman Schultz said she would be paying special attention to mental health treatment in the Veterans Administra­tion in a new role she has in the new Congress. Last week, she was named top Democrat on the Appropriat­ions Committee’s subcommitt­ee on military constructi­on, veterans affairs and related agencies.

Among the other issues discussed, Wasserman Schultz said, were problems people faced when they had to run from the terminal, often leaving behind identifica­tion, and “communicat­ions problems that arose.”

Israel said it might be good to have more locations where large groups of people could be bused after such an incident, as opposed to sending everyone to one place; in this case Port Everglades on the day of the shooting.

Israel said unsecured places, such as baggage claim at the airport, may need to be more protected. “Maybe we need to make these targets a little harder” to attack.

Israel also suggested a change in terminolog­y: “We’ve got to stop using the term active shooter. It’s actually active killer.”

 ?? CARLINE JEAN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Government officials discuss security in and around airports during a roundtable including, from left, Broward County Mayor Barbara Sharief, U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz and Broward Sheriff Scott Israel on Tuesday in Fort Lauderdale.
CARLINE JEAN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Government officials discuss security in and around airports during a roundtable including, from left, Broward County Mayor Barbara Sharief, U.S. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz and Broward Sheriff Scott Israel on Tuesday in Fort Lauderdale.

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