Siloam Springs Herald Leader

Record number of guns found at nation’s airports

- By Ron Wood NWA Democrat-Gazette

Concealed carry permits don’t allow the holders to carry a firearm onto a plane, according to the administra­tion.

HIGHFILL — A record number of people have brought guns to the nation’s airports so far this year, according to federal Transporta­tion Safety Administra­tion officials.

Northwest Arkansas National Airport has had 24 incidents so far this year compared to eight last year, according to airport police. All the incidents have been accidental — somebody forgot to take it out of their bag.

Concealed carry permits don’t allow the holders to carry a firearm onto a plane, according to the administra­tion. And, if a traveler found with a gun is a member of Safety Administra­tion PreCheck, the individual will lose his privilege.

Passengers can legally travel with firearms in checked baggage if they are properly packaged and declared at their airline ticket counter.

“What we’re talking about are the ones coming through the checkpoint — it’s not against the law to carry one in your bag,” said Russell White, chief of police at Northwest National, said of the guns found. “Basically, the TSA doesn’t do anything with them. They find them in the luggage, they won’t touch them once they find them, they just call us.”

Airport police have a procedure to follow when safety workers find a firearm, White said.

“What we do is take the firearm and the person, and we’ll bring them into the Police Department. We just do some basic checks on them to make sure they’re not a felon and that they can legally have a firearm, check to make sure the firearm is not stolen, those kinds of things,” White said.

“If everything’s good with it, what we do is either let them take it back to their car or we will hold it and they can pick it up when they come back,” he said.

Police do, however, provide the Safety Administra­tion with the person’s informatio­n and there’s usually a civil penalty to pay, White said.

Such an incident might shut down the inspection line for a moment, but there’s a police officer stationed within sight of the checkpoint most of the time, and offenders and their guns are removed from the area immediatel­y, he said.

“If it’s just accidental, we try to work with them where they don’t have to miss their flight,” White said.

Penalties for having loaded firearms, or unloaded firearms with accessible ammunition, in a carry-on bag range from $3,000 to $10,000 the first time and $10,000 to $13,910, for repeat violations, according to Patricia Mancha, a spokeswoma­n for the Safety Administra­tion. For unloaded firearms, it’s $1,500 to $2,475. There can also be a referral for criminal prosecutio­n.

“All of these are administra­tive fines,” Mancha said. “That’s just really on a case-by-case basis.”

Nathan Smith, Benton County prosecutin­g attorney, said his office doesn’t prosecute cases when there’s no criminal intent. He said the only criminal charge would be carrying a weapon and the law requires the person to have the intent to unlawfully employ it. People who simply forget and leave it in their bag didn’t intend anything criminal, he said.

“Obviously, it would be different if someone tried to sneak something onto a plane, but that hasn’t happened,” Smith said.

Nationwide, Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion officers stopped 4,495 passengers attempting to carry firearms through airport security checkpoint­s in the first nine months of 2021, the agency told The Associated Press last week. That was up from 4,432 incidents in 2019 and sets a 20-year record.

Safety Administra­tion officers found 3,257 firearms on passengers or their carry-on bags at checkpoint­s last year, although the total number of passengers screened at airport checkpoint­s across the country fell by 500 million compared to 2019 because of the covid-19 pandemic.

The result was twice as many firearms per million passengers screened were detected at checkpoint­s in 2020 compared to 2019. In 2020 officers caught about 10 firearms per million passengers compared to about five firearms per million passengers in 2019.

About 83% of the guns found by officers in 2020 were loaded.

Officers found firearms at 248 airports across the country. Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta Internatio­nal Airport had the most with 391. Dallas/Fort Worth Internatio­nal Airport had 232 and George Bush Interconti­nental Airport in Houston had 168, according to the administra­tion.

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/Charlie Kaijo ?? Laura Brinza, transporta­tion security officer, scans luggage at Northwest Arkansas National Airport in Highfill. Incidents of people bringing guns to airport security checkpoint­s are up across the country and Northwest National has had 24 such incidents so far this year, according to airport officials.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/Charlie Kaijo Laura Brinza, transporta­tion security officer, scans luggage at Northwest Arkansas National Airport in Highfill. Incidents of people bringing guns to airport security checkpoint­s are up across the country and Northwest National has had 24 such incidents so far this year, according to airport officials.

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