Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Feds’ new policy: Airport travelers with guns will lose their permits to carry

- By Torsten Ove Torsten Ove: tove@post-gazette.com

Too many people have been showing up at the airport with guns, so federal authoritie­s have started a program to revoke their permits to carry.

Steve Kaufman, the acting U.S. attorney, said on Wednesday that the Allegheny County Sheriff’s Office will rescind permits to carry for travelers who get caught with a gun in their carry-on bag at Pittsburgh Internatio­nal Airport security checkpoint­s.

At an airport news conference held by the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion, Mr. Kaufman said that 2021 appears to be a record-breaking year for the number of guns in carry-on bags.

“This is not the kind of record we aspire to break,” he said.

He said his office, the FBI, the Allegheny County police and TSA all review every gun incident. Security has found 27 guns so far this year, including five in a six-day span last month and early this month.

Passengers almost always say they forgot they had a gun in their bag, Mr. Kaufman said. No one files criminal charges because federal authoritie­s have to prove intent and they can’t. Even so, Mr. Kaufman said, “bringing guns to the checkpoint is completely unacceptab­le and poses a serious security risk.”

Passengers with guns already face fines from TSA, but Mr. Kaufman said a new deterrent will be rescinding concealed carry permits.

The U.S. attorney’s office also will contact sheriff’s offices in other counties to do the same.

“So the message to the flying public is this: Check your bags five times if you have to, but make 100% sure that your carry-on bags do not contain a firearm or other dangerous weapon,” Mr. Kaufman said. “That’s responsibl­e gun ownership, which is essential to protect the flying public.”

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