This is technically a bit off topic, but I thought the info would be good to pass along since we are they types of people to dance to our own beat (no pun intended) and most likely delve into the wildside a bit more than the "norm". Apparently the TSA has gotten their butt in a crack over having a passenger remove a nipple ring with pliers before boarding a plane.

I love to travel; I love to see my commrades performances and attend workshops; I love my piercings! Yet I've never even slightly entertained the idea that I might have to remove a piercing (or 9) with pliers to do so! I'm surprised with all of the traveling our dancers do, we haven't heard first hand experiences like this . . .

~ Aria ~

LOS ANGELES - The Transportation Security Administration said it
will change they way its officers search passengers with body
piercings after a Texas woman complained she was forced to remove a
nipple ring with pliers in order to board an airplane.

Mandi Hamlin, 37, had demanded an apology and her Los Angeles-based
attorney sent a letter to the TSA this week requesting a civil
rights investigation.

Hamlin said she was trying to board a flight from Lubbock to Dallas
on Feb. 24 when she was scanned by a TSA agent after passing through
a larger metal detector without problems.

The female TSA agent used a handheld detector that beeped when it
passed in front of Hamlin's chest, the Dallas-area resident said.

Hamlin said she told the woman she was wearing nipple piercings. The
agent then called over her male colleagues, one of whom said she
would have to remove the jewelry, Hamlin said.

Hamlin said she could not remove them and asked whether she could
instead display her pierced breasts in private to the female agent.
But several other male officers told her she could not board her
flight until the jewelry was out, she said.

Hamlin was taken behind a curtain and managed to remove one bar-
shaped piercing but had trouble with the second, a ring. She said
the officer gave her pliers to remove the ring, a process which
caused a physical pain.

The TSA said Friday in a statement on its Web site that the officers
properly followed procedures, but that the procedures must change.
In the future passengers can either allow a visual inspection of
their piercings, or remove them, the agency said.

The statement stopped short of apologizing to Hamlin.

"TSA acknowledges that our procedures caused difficulty for the
passenger involved and regrets the situation in which she found
herself," the agency said in a statement. "We appreciate her raising
awareness on this issue and we are changing the procedures to ensure
that this does not happen again."

Hamlin's attorney said she accepted the TSA statement as an apology,
and commended the agency for taking quick action. The policy change
is "an achievement for the protection of passengers' civil rights
while meeting the security goals of the TSA," Gloria Allred said.

___

On the Net:

www.tsa.gov
posted by:
Aria
Houston
  • Re: Planes, Workshops and Piercings . . . .

    Wed, April 2, 2008 - 8:40 PM
    I personally think their answers were a bunch of PC blabber that amounted to almost nothing, and that they probably won't do anything.

    And depending on how alternative this woman looked, that could have had an effect. I have gotten beeped with a belly ring, but I simple lift of the shirt was fine. But I looked pretty tame otherwise, my hair was a kind of natural color, I didn't have an interesting haircut, and I was wearing pajamas.

    I think that in the high alert for suspicious people, guards are not looking for the updated profile of dangerous, but rather what their own minds are trained on to dislike or distrust instead.
    • Re: Planes, Workshops and Piercings . . . .

      Thu, April 3, 2008 - 6:19 AM
      i've seen pix of her and at least while talking the the press with her lawyer she looked like a 50ish housewife. they did let her board with a belly piercing. it was just bs, period.
      • Re: Planes, Workshops and Piercings . . . .

        Thu, April 3, 2008 - 6:28 AM
        All I have to say is terrorists don't have nipple rings. TSA goes out of their way to target nonprofile people so they can say they don't profile. They were having a lot more fun targeting a woman with pierced nipples than an agitated guy--who could be agitated due to the fact his flight got canceled, long lines, or whatnot.
        • Re: Planes, Workshops and Piercings . . . .

          Thu, April 3, 2008 - 9:17 AM
          Yes, I agree alot of dust and alot of bullshit.
          My mom is 70 years old and she got stripsearched.
          It was so humiliating for her she doesn t even speak english can you imagine the horror she went through.
          Poor woman was so embarrassed she didn t even tell me untill a year later.
          I believe the airlines get away with stuff like that on a daily basis, because people like my mom they are even too embarrased and too humiliated to press charges.
  • Re: Planes, Workshops and Piercings . . . .

    Thu, April 3, 2008 - 4:04 PM
    Anything about this being a policy or procedure of TSA is utter bull. Passengers fly every day with countless body piercings, most of which are inert metals (like Treja said, none of my junk has ever set off an alarm). I'm leaning towards seeing this as malicious behavior on the part of the agent who demanded the piercings be removed. Yes, he might have been afraid they were tiny piercing-shaped bombs, but that's an outright prejudice based on his own lack of information, and most likely enhanced by his company's "play it safe or suffer the consequences" attitude.

    BS. I call BS on you. Jackholes.
    • Re: Planes, Workshops and Piercings . . . .

      Thu, April 3, 2008 - 6:23 PM
      Why in the hell did she have to take them out?!? How the fuck are they any different than a standard earring? I just don't get why a visual inspection wasn't enough for them, I assume she had to present them once she took them out, I'm just not seeing the logic here at all (probably cause there is none!) I *completely* understand needing to show them, they need to be thorough with security and that would be no problem for me. Taking them out tho, is uncalled for. I'm also surprised they went off too.

      I get snippy when people want me to take mine out. I had a jaw x-ray before my wisdom extraction and I refused to take my 6 month old rook out though I did take my upper helix out for the first time(I got it right back in, it was old enough that I didn't worry about it closing). They finally agreed it was high enough to be okay left in. That piercing has not left my ear since its been inserted 6 years ago. We talk about this at work too where they raise a fuss about our nostril studs occasionally. These piercings are so much more than jewelry, they represent moments of courage in our lives and I do not want them closing up when someone requests I take them out.

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