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nmap
12-17-2009, 08:46
Ahh, the airlines. I suppose many will travel by air during the holidays - if you check your luggage, you might want to read the article.

LINK (http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703581204574599953475913542.html?m od=article-outset-box#articleTabs%3Darticle)

As travelers get ready for holiday flights, they might want to skip tucking presents into their checked suitcases this year. That's because baggage theft is on the rise.

This year, Delta Air Lines Inc. baggage handlers were caught rifling through suitcases in the belly of airplanes in Hartford, Conn., pocketing laptops, cameras, iPods, GPS units, jewelry, watches and earrings, according to Lt. J. Paul Vance of the Connecticut State Police.

Authorities also broke up a ring of airline thieves in St. Louis who, according to Lambert Airport Police Chief Paul Mason, were targeting soldier's bags that were shipping off to war. Baggage handlers pulled soldiers' duffels off a conveyor belt in a tunnel, stashed loot and then picked it up later, taking it home under their coats or in backpacks. Among the stolen items recovered: laptops, electronic game systems, cameras, cigarettes, battery chargers, sunglasses and firearms.

Baggage-theft arrests have been made this year in cities around the world, from Dublin, Ireland, to Adelaide, Australia. In Phoenix, a couple was found with 1,000 pieces of stolen luggage and belongings piled floor-to-ceiling in their home. The pair had been lifting bags off carousels at the airport.

In Portland, Ore., Northwest Airlines baggage handlers were caught stealing items and posting them for sale on eBay right from a supervisor's airline-owned computer. Baggage theft reports are up nearly 50% this year, according to airport spokesman Steve Johnson. Portland airport police have received 195 reports of baggage theft this year through October, compared with 132 reports in the same period of 2008. At least 43 of the reports this year relate to the ring at Northwest, Mr. Johnson said.

In New York, police caught baggage handlers stealing items from bags and then switching destination tags so that the luggage would be lost. If the bag was reunited with owners, the circle of possible suspects who handled it had been expanded, covering the tracks of the thief.


Associated Press A Phoenix couple allegedly stole luggage off carousels at the airport. Police found more than 1,000 items at their home.
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Airlines say baggage theft is rare among the millions of passengers who fly each year, but law-enforcement officials say it has been growing significantly. "There's been a tremendous increase in the last five years. It's pretty bad—a lot is getting stolen every day," said a prosecutor in the Queens County district attorney's office, which handles airport theft cases in New York.

Authorities attribute an escalation to the sour economy and to tighter security around cargo, which historically has been a target for thieves. Passenger baggage is now easier pickings. In addition, cost-cutting at airlines and police departments has reduced patrols and enforcement, officials say.

Missing Golf Balls
Some thefts are small. Charles Petersen of Biddeford, Maine, had about 20 golf balls stolen from a locked travel case on a flight from Boston to Tampa. "It feels like they are doing this with impunity," he said.

And some thefts amount to grand larceny. Two Kennedy Airport baggage handlers working for AMR Corp.'s American Airlines were charged with stealing a bag of jewelry worth $280,000. One of the men was a crew chief.

For travelers, the sting of a theft is often followed by frustration with airlines and the Transportation Security Administration, which often are slow to respond to reports and in most cases deny any responsibility. Airline ticket rules—the "contract of carriage"—exclude liability for any valuables in luggage, such as computers, cameras, electronic equipment, jewelry, business documents, artwork or similar valuable items.

Amanda Slaver flew from Rochester, N.Y., to Las Vegas in February and found that her jewelry bag had been unzipped. The good stuff—gold, diamond and sapphire family heirlooms—had been taken and the plastic, glass and metal jewelry remained.

"It was devastating," she said. "Your trust is broken."

For the next seven months she argued with Delta over a $3,000 claim. The airline said it wasn't liable because its contract of carriage excludes valuables from the airline's responsibility. Delta offered her a $100 voucher toward a future ticket. "It seemed less like they wanted to help me and more that they just wanted me to go away," she said.


Vijay Dandapani, a hotel executive in New York, complained to both Continental Airlines Inc. and the TSA after a brand-new iPod was taken out of its carton and stolen from his bag traveling from Newark, N.J., to Mumbai. TSA closed his case saying it couldn't help him; Continental sent him a $100 travel voucher.

"You feel violated," he said.

Both airline workers and TSA screeners have access to checked luggage, and it's often impossible to tell who is responsible unless a thief is caught red-handed. Airlines say they try to avoid finger-pointing with TSA over blame. Law-enforcement officials say TSA thefts, though they got lots of attention in past years, account for a relatively small portion of all baggage theft and have been declining.

In 2005, TSA paid out more than $3 million in claims for theft and baggage damage, but by 2008, that dropped to $813,000. Through October this year, TSA has paid out only $446,000 in baggage claims, a spokeswoman said.

Adding Cameras
TSA has reduced baggage theft as it has moved from opening bags and searching by hand to running them through scanning machines on conveyor belts, limiting the number of bags handled by screeners. The agency says it has also added more surveillance cameras to baggage-screening areas.

A total of 330 TSA officers have been fired for theft since the agency's inception, a spokeswoman said.

Complaints filed with TSA about property losses—which include theft—have also dropped, down 26% this year through October compared with the same period of 2008.

Airlines say they look for patterns in theft claims filed by customers and work with police to catch thieves. Arrests in Portland, Hartford, St. Louis and New York all included Delta employees or contractors, for example, and Delta says that's because it initiated most of the investigations. In New York, for example, Delta and TSA planted a bag stuffed with electronics in the JFK baggage system and two men working together, one a TSA screener and the other a baggage handler, were videotaped swiping a computer and cellphone, then switching the luggage tags to help cover their tracks.

Since it's hard to pin down at which airport items were stolen, airport police chiefs have launched a new reporting system that tracks the itinerary of a stolen bag, alerts airports along the route and tries to spot patterns, says Chief Mason in St. Louis, who is also president of Airports Law Enforcement Agencies Network, an association of police chiefs. In its first six months, the system has already identified one airport that might be having a problem, he said.

Lost Or Stolen
Airlines don't report statistics on baggage theft, and often never know if a bag was simply lost or if it was stolen. Carriers say they do have surveillance cameras in some locations, and they do conduct spot checks at baggage carousels to match tags on bags with claim checks. Theft of an entire bag, while rare, they say, is most often traced back to someone stealing from a baggage-claim carousel, as with the Phoenix couple.

Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport has begun new random luggage checks and increased video camera surveillance and patrols in baggage-claim areas. Other airports say they patrol baggage areas, watch baggage handlers and sometimes send officers in civilian clothes to monitor activity in claim areas. But baggage theft hasn't been a high priority amid all the other airport security concerns.

It's the lack of responsibility for theft that leaves many customers fuming. Jack La Torre's daughter was rushing home to New York from graduate school at Stanford University in California with a medical condition affecting her hands. Since she couldn't carry anything, she checked her Mac Air laptop in her luggage. The computer never made it home.

Mr. La Torre, a retired New York Police Department lieutenant who now works at Columbia University, pressed Delta to check security tapes and to waive Delta's exclusion of liability because of his daughter's condition.

The airline apologized, but said the stolen item should have been transported by other means. "We do not feel that compensation is in order," Delta said.

"What sort of protection do we have for the consumer?" Mr. La Torre asks.

Avoiding Baggage Theft

Baggage theft hits many travelers. Here's how to protect yourself:

Never put anything of value in checked luggage. Airlines don't cover it.

Small, easily pocketed items are most at risk, from jewelry and electronics down to battery chargers and golf balls.If you can't carry valuables onboard, ship them separately.

With shipping companies, you can insure your valuables and get tracking information.

Don't rely on luggage locks. They are easily broken or bypassed.If you do find something stolen, report it immediately to the airline, to the TSA and to local airport police.

Mark your bag with colorful ribbon or straps (that won't get caught in conveyor belts) so it can be spotted easily on a crowded carousel.

That lessens the chances someone else will walk off with it, intentionally or by accident..

Bill Harsey
12-17-2009, 13:11
Some knifemakers are well versed in this problem.
Ask Ken Onion about stuff not being in the checked luggage upon arrival.

As a rule we try to ship all stock via FedEx or UPS to our destination and back now. This adds to the travel expenses but has to be done.

Sigaba
12-17-2009, 14:45
Can anyone recall the last time they were asked for baggage claim checks?:confused: IIRC, it was the early 1990s for me.

FWIW, KCBS, the L.A. area CBS affiliate, has been doing "undercover" news reports on baggage theft for a while. Their efforts have targeted TSA staff who go through passengers' luggage and, lately, people who just take baggage off the carousel and walk out the airport.

Richard
12-17-2009, 15:09
SEARCH function using 'airport baggage theft' = Transportation Security Administration, on the JOB!!! thread 11-04-2009 ;)

Richard

nmap
12-17-2009, 17:02
SEARCH function using 'airport baggage theft' = Transportation Security Administration, on the JOB!!! thread 11-04-2009 ;)

Richard

I can see how the threads are related, and perhaps someone with the necessary capability could merge the threads...

In most instances, including this one, I use a single key word - "airport", for example - and then look for threads with the equivalent title close to the date of publication. Coming up with longer (and better) search phrases such as above perhaps requires stronger search-foo than I have been using. Maybe there are some hints I could use to improve my searches?

Gypsy
12-17-2009, 19:08
They have locks for luggage that only a TSA master key will work on...this way your luggage stays locked.


http://www.safeskieslocks.com/index.php


http://www.tsa.gov/travelers/airtravel/assistant/locks.shtm

Of course, this won't stop someone from grabbing your bag off the carousel...

Utah Bob
12-17-2009, 19:58
My wife flew to Orland for a family reunion last week. I told her to only take a carry-on and her purse and if she picked up more than she could fit in them while she was in Orlando to ship stuff back in a flat rate box.
I think it's great that they charge you extra for checking your luggage and then steal it. Stimulates the economy.:mad:

The Reaper
12-17-2009, 20:18
They have locks for luggage that only a TSA master key will work on...this way your luggage stays locked.


http://www.safeskieslocks.com/index.php


http://www.tsa.gov/travelers/airtravel/assistant/locks.shtm

Of course, this won't stop someone from grabbing your bag off the carousel...


Doesn't work.

You can pop a zipper with a ballpoint pen or even a quarter and close it back to look normal after rifling through the contents faster than I can explain it.

Bob, you are on a roll today.:D

TR

Bill Harsey
12-17-2009, 21:10
I tried those TSA locks for a while.
The locks never made it back onto the suitcase after inspection. One day upon arriving back at my home airport I sought out the top TSA person there to chew his ass out, logging style, for this happening for the third time. I Figured that they couldn't kick me off a flight I'd just stepped off of but they sure provide more assistance the next time ya try to get on one.

As you all can guess, nothing got better.

Richard
12-17-2009, 21:26
My wife travels a lot and has executive platinum status with the airlines. We in no way fit any profile used for drug trafficers or terrorists. In spite of all that, we started getting selected by TSA for an in-depth inspection of our carry-on luggage whenever we traveled and got tired of it all. Two years ago, we went out and bought a bunch of > XXX stuff at CondomSense to put in our carry-on suitcases just because we were tired of it all and - being pissed off - to f**k with the size 2 hats of the TSA inspectors. Sure enough, my wife got tagged for an inspection. The looks on the face of the female TSA inspector and the other pin-heads manning the inspection station as they went through the bag and found the 'wares' were priceless - and it was the last time we've undergone such a search.

I'm not saying the two are connected...but...:confused:

Richard's jaded $.02 :munchin

Bill Harsey
12-17-2009, 21:30
My wife travels a lot and has executive platinum status with the airlines. We in no way fit any profile used for drug trafficers or terrorists. In spite of all that, we started getting selected by TSA for an in-depth inspection of our carry-on luggage whenever we traveled and got tired of it all. Two years ago, we went out and bought a bunch of > XXX stuff at CondomSense to put in our carry-on suitcases just because we were tired of it all and - being pissed off - to f**k with the size 2 hats of the TSA inspectors. Sure enough, my wife got tagged for an inspection. The looks on the face of the female TSA inspector and the other pin-heads manning the inspection station as they went through the bag and found the 'wares' were priceless - and it was the last time we've undergone such a search.

I'm not saying the two are connected...but...:confused:

Richard's jaded $.02 :munchin

Richard,
You are my new hero!!!:lifter


now I have some more shopping to do.

The Reaper
12-17-2009, 21:44
Richard,
You are my new hero!!!:lifter


now I have some more shopping to do.

Bill:

Please get the video camera rolling before you brief your wife on her new travel responsibilities.

I think we would all enjoy seeing that clip.

TR

Richard
12-18-2009, 14:52
The airlines ought to tie a sprig of mistletoe over the scale where you check your bags so you can feel better when you kiss them goodbye. :rolleyes:

Richard's jaded $.02 :munchin

Trip_Wire (RIP)
12-18-2009, 14:58
TSA got my PS Surefire light out of my carry-on recently. I didn't notice the loss until I got to my destination. (SeaTac Airport — TSA) :mad:

Utah Bob
12-18-2009, 16:35
Probably few stolen baggage problems in Israel. But there are other luggage concerns...


Oy! (http://www.armoryblog.com/news/israeli-security-shoots-girls-macbook/)

Gypsy
12-18-2009, 18:15
Doesn't work.


TR

Thanks TR, I won't waste my cash.

Bill Harsey
12-18-2009, 18:45
TSA got my PS Surefire light out of my carry-on recently. I didn't notice the loss until I got to my destination. (SeaTac Airport — TSA) :mad:

That hurts. Are there security cams on these folks?

The Reaper
12-18-2009, 18:49
Thanks TR, I won't waste my cash.

I have a set of TSA locks. I just don't expect checked baggage to be secure.

That hurts. Are there security cams on these folks?

Who do you think is watching them?

TR

Bill Harsey
12-18-2009, 19:10
Who do you think is watching them?

TR

Point taken.

HowardCohodas
12-18-2009, 20:29
As a CCW instructor I frequently travel with my EDC guns. Some observations from two recent trips, one to Denver and one to Seattle.


The airlines and the TCA agents don't understand the rules on where the declaration tag goes. When I identify myself as an instructor, they pay attention.
Bright colored handle covers are insufficient to discourage someone from picking up the wrong bag.
Bright tape (1.5" wide) outlining my initials on the front and back of my bag works better.
Most of the TSA agents that process the bag engage in interesting conversations when they see my handguns and how they are packaged and secured. Even got some leads for students from one of them in Seattle.
The TSA compliant locks vary in quality and it's hard to tell from the ads. I prefer the ones with a combination lock and a flag that tells me it has been opened by the TSA.
My EDC Surefire Defender E2D LED remains in my pocket next to my necessarily empty holster.
All my expensive toys, except my guns with their attached Crimson Trace laser sights remain in my old fashioned attache case under the seat in front of me.