TSA Confiscates Mentally Challenged Man’s Toy
posted at 1:57 pm on June 10, 2011 by Howard Portnoy
We can all sleep easier tonight knowing that Drew Mandy’s plastic toy hammer is in the trash rather than terrorizing passengers and crew on the plane he and his parents boarded for Walt Disney World.
If you’re looking for someone to thank for depriving a mentally challenged 29-year-old of his much-beloved security blanket, look no further than the Transportation and Security Administration.
Members of this feckless bunch sprung into action at Detroit Metro Airport when they first laid eyes on Mandy, whose parents say has the mental capacity of a 2-year-old. They singled him out for a special pat-down, which makes perverse sense of a sort: Special pat-downs for people with special needs.
Security personnel sensed they had sniffed out a troublemaker when they asked Drew to place his feet on a yellow shoe line, and he failed to comply. His father intervened, explaining that his son didn’t understand what they were asking, but the TSA ordered David Mandy to back off, explaining, “Please, sir, we know what we’re doing.”
They proceeded to pat Drew’s pants down, questioning the padding they found, which turned out to be his adult diapers. When the agents asked Drew to take his hand and rub the front and back of his pants so they could swab it for explosives, his dad tried again in vain to explain that his son suffered severe retardation, but the stalwart TSA refused to be deterred.
It was then that agents spotted the “weapons” Drew was attempting to smuggle onto the flight: a ball and a six-inch plastic hammer.
“My son carries his ball and his hammer for security. He goes everywhere with [them],” explained his father.
But the TSA wasn’t falling for that. One of them took the hammer and tapped the wall, observing, “’See, it’s hard. It could be used as a weapon.”
Drew’s parents were told they could make arrangements to ship the toy to their destination. Since that would result in their missing their flight, however, David Mandy reluctantly tossed the toy instead, remarking, “It just killed me to have to throw it away because he’s been carrying this like for 20 years.”
While the TSA is busy harassing passengers who pose no legitimate threat, those who do meantime are boarding planes with increasing frequency. In March, a man with a history of psychiatric problems sneaked past security and onto a plane at JFK airport in New York. A week earlier, another passenger boarded a plane at the same airport carrying box cutters—the very “weapon” used by the 9/11 hijackers to commandeer four planes.
Understandably upset, Drew Mandy’s father wrote to the TSA and received a conciliatory response that noted among other things that the 800 TSA agents at Detroit Metro Airport would be retrained as a result of their mishandling of Drew’s case. Retrained? How about training them to do their job correctly in the first place?
In case you’re feeling bad about Drew’s losing his hammer, the story has a happy footnote. Drew’s mother, having evidently learned long ago how to suffer fools, had a second hammer secreted in her backpack. It passed through the airport’s eagle-eyed security without a hitch.
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OMG, there is NO way these tsa people can be that heartless is there? Bless Drew’s heart and his parents for having to go through this. This is getting to the point where I don’t know why anyone would fly any more. Stupid does not even to describe this tsa crud!
L
letget on June 10, 2011 at 2:25 PM
If the TSA was in reality trained properly, there would not be as many pat downs during a 10 year period as they perform in a single hour.
ericdijon on June 10, 2011 at 2:34 PM
I wanted to comment on this, but I actually am so appalled and disgusted that I’m not sure what to say.
While certainly I am horrified – though not in the least surprised – that these employees are so dismally incapable of doing their jobs in a way that might meet its purpose, I think I am angrier at the gratuitous cruelty shown to this poor man and his family.
In general I do not advocate violence or “street justice”, but I tell you here and now, I would have prevented anyone from stopping Drew’s family from beating the TSA people senseless had I been there and had they not been such gracious and decent people so as to NOT choose that path.
To my shame, I don’t think I could have restrained my fury and disgust had I been in their shoes. How awful for all of them.
I am sure there are some good TSA workers, but these were not they. I hope these “workers” are punished mightily, first by losing jobs, and then by becoming victims of crime. Multiple times.
MogenDavid on June 10, 2011 at 2:43 PM
Remember, back in the day, when it was corrupt, authoritarian regimes that had security services that were at best indifferent, if not outright hostile to their fellow citizens.
rbj on June 10, 2011 at 3:08 PM
Shouldn’t that be: “Mentally Challenged TSA Confiscates Man’s Toy”?
cthulhu on June 10, 2011 at 3:22 PM
I LOVE that the mom snuck it into her backpack. It reminds me of a similar story that I expeienced.
When my wife and I went on our honeymoon to St. Croix, we purchased a bottle of hot sauce for her brother who loves new kinds to try. We kept it in our carry on because we were afraid it would get smashed in our checked luggage. Of course the eagle-eyed TSA agents quickly said we could not bring the bottle with us, and the only way we could take it would be to put it in our checked bags. I went all the way back through security to the luggage counter but the woman their said our bags had already been loaded.
I kept the bottle with me and went back through the long line at security, finally arriving at a different TSA agent. I explained the situation to her, and how my flight was in final boarding (my wife was terrified that I was going to miss the flight), and she finally said okay and to put it in my bag.
What good are these ridiculous rules if they can be abridged by any worker who chooses to? I mean, I’m glad she let me keep it, but that’s because it was a stupid rule in the first place.
On a hilarious side note, when I was overseas in Iraq a rocket landed some 20 feet away from me and a fellow Marine and did not explode. After EOD came and cleared it, my CO gave me a chunk of the rocket casing to keep as a souvenir. I had stored it in the top slot on my suitcase, but obviously did not bring it with me on my honeymoon. Unfortunately the explosive residue was still on the suitcase and my bag was flagged for a more detailed inspection.
I stood there while they completely emptied my suitcase, wiping down almost everything with explosive-sensitive wipes, realizing what the problem was but also knowing that there was no way I could say, “Yeah, I USED to have some explosives in there, but it’s gone now.” They didn’t find anything, assumed it was a bad positive, and we were on our way. I don’t travel with that suitcase anymore.
Living4Him5534 on June 10, 2011 at 3:55 PM
All the retraining in the world cannot fix stupid.
I have worked with individuals of this level of mental capacity. It is not likely, unless you are a total moron or just want to be an AH, that you could not see the disablity and limitations. Even the severily mentally challenged that I have worked with could figure out the problem with this man’s son and make allowances. Worse is their inablity to comprehend what the father was telling them,…
or they wanted to be moronic bast–ds, which appears to be the only answer for their behavior. They have no intergretiy at all or self respect for themselves if they have to hurt other people to get a laugh.
As for retraining.. that is an inside joke for them. Initial training is listening to a speaker read over the material given to them for a day and a quick run through on how to frisk, or in their case be professional child and adult molesting sexual perverts. Any additional training, including retraining is done on a computer on the honor system, meaning that they only have to say they did it to get the credit for having done it.
Alan West said what he has to have everyday when he lays his head down on his pillow at night, is his integrety. They guys obviously would not know what that is. A good bet is they are going over the memories of the women, men of children they most enjoyed that day when their head hits the pillow.
Feeling that they made air travel safer? Doughtful, and doughtful that it crosses their minds. Too busy looking for the next sexual victim in the line to worry about terroist who are walking right past them with box cutters, exploding underware and bomb making materials in their luggage. The later is not their in their UNION job description to be concerned about.
Franklyn on June 10, 2011 at 5:34 PM
On our last flight the TSA singled out a grade schooler to test her water bottle – her mother said they boght it in the airport store, so TSA then tested the expressed breast milk she was carrying for the infant. Those were the two people they chose to rescreen at the gate as we boarded. Not the young drunk guys who were obviously still on their Vegas bender, any other passengers just the children.
I am not surprised the TSA chose this young man for screening. This is what they do.
batterup on June 10, 2011 at 6:35 PM
Would it be considered a threat to wish aloud that somebody might demonstrate this toy’s offensive capacity all over John Pistole’s smug face?
Jeddite on June 10, 2011 at 7:50 PM
TSA is not about security, it is about making people feel safe, however false the impression.
Random Numbers (Brian Epps) on June 10, 2011 at 8:45 PM
I hope any idiots who defend the TSA as doing all this for our own good pays close attention to the last paragraph. If a mom can sneak stuff through no problem, then this security theatre is neither necessary nor even efficient.
So many children and women molested, so many rights violated, and for what?
RachDubya on June 10, 2011 at 9:08 PM
Hey – turns out fists are hard as well! How about we make it a rule that anything less dangerous than a fist is allowed on board, eh?
It’s really sad how quickly air travel has turned from a pleasure into a grinding chore – and how long it may take us to undue what the government has done.
David Shane on June 11, 2011 at 12:02 AM
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Ed Morrissey on June 11, 2011 at 1:12 PM