Federal Attitude Policy
by
James Bovard
by James Bovard
DIGG THIS
The Transportation
Security Administration has created more gantlets at American airports
than most travelers realize. It has continually changed the rules
for flying since it first deployed its 40,000+ army of screeners
across the land. Americans are at much greater risk of being arrested
or fined in the airport for not kowtowing to federal agents. The
rise of the TSA vivifies how low contemporary Americans have fallen.
James Madison observed in The Federalist Papers,
It will be of little avail to the people that the laws are made
by men of their own choice if the laws be ... so incoherent that
they cannot be understood; if they be repealed or revised before
they are promulgated, or undergo such incessant changes that no
man, who knows what the law is today, can guess what it will be
tomorrow.
Today, law
and regulations have become tools to force people to behave in ways
government officials approve of, rather than a clear line that citizens
can respect in order to live their lives in privacy and peace. Government
agencies now routinely covertly change their regulations. The rule
of law the classical concept endorsed by the Massachusetts
constitution of 1780 as a restraint on government power has
been replaced by the rule of memo, whereby federal officials
on a whim create new rules to bind private citizens.
Americans
of the Revolutionary era glorified the law because it was seen as
a means to restrain government and to secure the rights of the citizens.
Nobel Laureate Friedrich Hayek defined the rule of law in 1944:
Government in all its actions is bound by rules fixed and announced
beforehand rules which make it possible to foresee with fair
certainty how the authority will use its coercive powers.
The rule of
law aims to minimize discretionary power. But the TSA maximizes
its discretion to change the rules travelers must obey at any time.
Fining for
fun
TSA agents
are entitled to reverential treatment, regardless of how much damage
they inflict on peoples travel schedules or luggage. The TSA
slapped fines on almost 5,000 people in 2003, yet never made any
public announcement that people faced fines for violations. There
were no warnings and people who received a fine in the mail were
never informed of their right to contest or appeal the fine. TSA
waited until early 2004 to announce the fine system, at which time
the maximum fine was raised from $1,100 to $10,000.
TSA agents
at Baltimore-Washington International Airport confiscated a small
steak knife from the briefcase of Susan Brown Campbell, a California
lawyer. After she received a $150 fine in the mail, she called TSA
seeking information on how to challenge the fine. A TSA lawyer phoned
Campbell and, as she later stated, was very, very intimidating,
warning that the penalty could be up to $10,000. Campbell
was told she would have to travel back to Baltimore to contest the
fine. TSA punished Campbells insolence by doubling her fine
to $300.
Travelers
can be heavily fined for inadvertently possessing the same kind
of object TSA now approves giving to first-class passengers during
flights. It ruled in September 2003 that airlines would be permitted
to provide metal knives to first-class passengers at mealtime. TSA
spokeswoman Yolanda Clark said of a typical airline knife, Even
though its stainless steel, it has rounded edges and the chances
of it actually being used to bring down an aircraft are probably
minimal. The metal knives given to first-class passengers
may be potentially more dangerous than most items seized at TSA
checkpoints. But the agency has no plans to boost its seizure totals
by launching raids on first-class cabins.
The fines
are an extension of the power the feds awarded themselves in a February
2002 Federal Register notice, which announced that people
could be arrested if they acted in a way that might distract
or inhibit a screener from effectively performing his or her duties....
A screener encountering such a situation must turn away from his
or her normal duties to deal with the disruptive individual, which
may affect the screening of other individuals. Practically
any comment or behavior that makes a TSA screener turn away
from whatever he was doing can thus be a federal offense.
A thousand
people were arrested in airports at TSAs behest in 2002, and
roughly 1,500 were arrested in 2003. (Many of those arrested were
caught with firearms or bona fide dangerous weapons.) Since the
TSA is now intercepting 15,000 prohibited items a day from travelers,
the new system of fines could raise enough money to pay for fancy
new epaulets for every TSA agents uniform.
TSA agents
can fine Americans up to $1,500 for any alleged nonphysical
interference at a TSA checkpoint. There is no formal definition
for this offense. TSA spokeswoman Ann Davis said the offense included
any nonphysical situation that in any way would interfere
with the screener and his or her ability to continue to work or
interfere with their ability to do their jobs. This penalty
would seem to be limited solely by the imagination or the malice
of TSA agents.
TSA agents
can slap fines on Americans based on attitude, which
TSA classifies as one of the aggravating factors in
determining financial punishments. TSA has issued no guidance on
the precise amount of obligatory groveling at airport checkpoints.
People who question TSA commands are probably far more likely to
be fined.
The Wall
Street Journal reported in 2005 that individual TSA airport
federal security directors have sweeping discretion
to impose penalties on travelers or not. The frequency of
fines ranged from 300 per million passengers to zero per million
passengers. The Manchester, New Hampshire, airport had by far the
highest rate of fines for travelers. The airports manager,
Kevin Manger, complained, Far too much discretion has been
given to the federal security directors.
Ann Davis
explained why the 160 federal security directors had such varying
policies: Im sure they and their regulatory staff have
differing philosophical approaches.
But passengers
hit with TSA fines are not facing a philosophical conundrum. Instead,
they are being hit by the Iron Fist of Uncle Sam. It is not a philosophical
dispute: it is an issue of arbitrary power and intimidation.
The TSAs
system of fines is a travesty of the Administrative Procedures Act
which guarantees Americans due process rights in dealings
with federal agencies. Instead, TSA simply concocted a system of
fines, failed to give people warning or notice, failed to define
the key terms, failed to notify violators of their right to appeal.
And if people are unsatisfied with the TSAs justice
they must go through the Coast Guards administrative
law judge system to dispute the fee. This guarantees years of delay
and makes it far more difficult for an American citizen to let a
jury of his peers in a federal courtroom decide the justice of the
governments action.
Petty tyrants
The TSA has
made little or no effort to control the attitude or arrogance of
many of its own screeners. In March 2004, airline passengers filed
almost 3,000 formal complaints with the federal government over
the conduct of TSA screeners. Hundreds of people complained about
the rudeness of TSA screeners. And yet, none of these complaints
by taxpayers and citizens will result in a single attitude fine
for a TSA employee. (Air travelers filed four times more complaints
against the TSA than against airlines.)
These fines
have nothing to do with preventing terrorist attacks. The 9/11 hijackers
intensely studied American airport-security procedures. Once the
system of attitude fines becomes known, savvy hijackers will simply
work around it the same way that the hijackers learned how
to bypass obstacles at airport checkpoints prior to the 9/11 attacks.
The
TSAs attitude-fine regime may soon become far worse. The TSA
is unleashing a horde of behavior detection officers
into airports, aiming to have 500 spread across the land by the
end of this year. The BDOs will be surveilling passengers for body
language and facial cues ... for signs of bad intentions.
The TSAs latest intrusion is based on an Israeli model. McClatchy
Newspapers reported last August that
Jay M. Cohen, undersecretary of Homeland Security for Science and
Technology, said in May that he wants to automate passenger screening
by using videocams and computers to measure and analyze heart rate,
respiration, body temperature and verbal responses as well as facial
micro-expressions.
There
is no word yet on whether the TSA will begin fining passengers who
break into a sweat because of all the government nonsense they encounter
at airports.
Attitude fines
exemplify that TSA aims to rule airports by fear. Anyone who is
not properly docile can be treated as a public enemy. The attitude
fines illustrate how power has gone to the heads of TSA chiefs.
Amidst a surge of private and congressional complaints about TSA
abuses, the TSA aspires to shut the American people up, once and
for all. Intimidating people is the same as protecting them, and
exalting federal agents the same as protecting public safety, apparently.
August
29, 2008
James Bovard
[send him mail] is the author
of the just-released Attention
Deficit Democracy, The
Bush Betrayal, and Terrorism
& Tyranny: Trampling Freedom, Justice, and Peace to Rid the
World of Evil. He serves as a policy advisor for The
Future of Freedom Foundation. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2008 The Future of Freedom Foundation
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