The Mercury News Weekend

Mystery note pops up in luggage

- Amy Dickinson You can email Amy Dickinson at askamy@ amydickins­on.com or send a letter to Ask Amy, P.O. Box 194, Freeville, NY 13068. You can also follow her on Twitter @ askingamy or Facebook.

Recently my daughter and I traveled several thousand miles via major airline. Due to various snafus, our luggage did not arrive at our destinatio­n at the same time we did. We had conversati­ons with airline representa­tives at the arrival airport while we tried to sort out the problem. They said they would deliver the bags.

Later that afternoon, my daughter’s bag arrived, and inside was a handwritte­n note from someone, presumably one of the baggage claim reps, who said that he found her attractive and enjoyed talking with her. He wrote down his number and asked her to call.

I was stunned. She simply dismissed it.

I feel it was completely wrong for them to open her bag in the first place, since there was a tag clearly identifyin­g the bag on the outside. I also felt it was so wrong to put in a personal note of ANY kind.

My daughter says I’m overreacti­ng, but YUCK.

What do you think of this?

— Baggage Handler

DEAR HANDLER » I have shared your question with the media representa­tives of two major airlines and also the Transport Workers Union, which represents baggage handlers. All have acknowledg­ed receiving your question, but have not responded.

I assume that this behavior is not sanctioned, but happens from time to time.

The note was put into your daughter’s bag by airline or airport personnel AFTER it had been security screened and flown to its destinatio­n. (It’s also possible that the note had been placed in the bag by a third-party contractor at your destinatio­n airport.)

Because the bag was clearly tagged for delivery on the outside, I can’t imagine a valid reason to open it.

Yes, my response would be similar to yours: yuck.

If your daughter is an adult, she has the right to react to it on her own behalf.

However, depending on her age (and perhaps depending on who paid for her airline ticket and baggage fee), if you want to complain, you might take a picture of his note and forward it to the airport’s management, asking for a response or explanatio­n.

DEAR AMY » Hello! I happened to see that the exact same letter you ran (from “Disrespect­ed DIL”) was also published in another advice column.

What’s your problem? Are you running out of material and taking from other columnists? How embarrasse­d are you?

— Caught You

DEAR CAUGHT » People occasional­ly submit their questions to multiple columnist at the same time. There is really no way to prevent it.

Yes, I do find this embarrassi­ng, but I’m always interested to see how other columnists answer. In this case, our advice was in sync.

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