A TSA
agent convicted of stealing more than $800,000 worth of goods from travelers
said this type of theft is “commonplace” among airport security. Almost 400 TSA
officers have been fired for stealing from passengers since 2003.
Pythias
Brown, a former Transportation Security Administration officer at Newark
Liberty International Airport, spent four years stealing everything he could
from luggage and security checkpoints, including clothing, laptops, cameras,
Nintendo Wiis, video games and cash.
Speaking
publicly for the first time after being released after three years in prison,
Brown told ABC News that he used the X-ray scanners to locate the most valuable
items to snatch.
“I could
tell whether it was cameras or laptops or portable cameras or whatever kind of
electronic was in the bag,” he said.
Brown
often worked alone, screening luggage behind the ticket counters. He was
frequently told the overhead surveillance cameras, installed to prevent theft,
were not working.
“It was
so easy,” he said. “I walked right out of the checkpoint with a Nintendo Wii in
my hand. Nobody said a word.”
With
more electronics than any one individual could need, Brown began to sell the
stolen items on eBay. At the time of his arrest, he was selling 80 cameras,
video games and computers online. Brown said the theft was comparable to an
addiction.
“It was
like being on drugs,” he said. “I was like, ‘What am I doing?’ but the next day
I was right back at it.”
Brown
was finally caught after selling a camera he stole from the luggage of a CNN
producer. When he sold the camera on eBay, he forgot to remove the news
networks’ logo stickers.
“I got
complacent,” he said.
TSA’s
culture of theft
But
while Brown believes he might have been one of the worst thieves at the TSA, he
imagines the agency’s culture makes it easy for others to do the same. Many
officers don’t care about their work and complain about low pay and being
treated badly, he claims, which prompts them to steal. To make it even easier
to get away with, TSA managers also never search their employees’ bags.
The
agency says it has a zero-tolerance policy for theft and terminates the
contracts of all thieves within the TSA. In the past ten years, almost 400 TSA
officers have been fired for stealing, 11 of which were fired this year.
ABC’s
interview with Brown highlights the extent of the dilemma passengers face when
traveling with valuables. Brown is just one of many officers caught in the act
of stealing goods worth thousands.
In
February, 2011, two TSA officers were arrested for stealing $40,000 in cash
from a checked bag in New York’s John F. Kennedy Airport. Using an X-ray
machine, the men found that the bag contained $170,000 and removed some of the
money.
In the
first two months of this year, a TSA baggage screener in Orlando was arrested
for stealing valuables by hiding them in a laptop-sized hidden pocket in his
jacket and selling the goods on Craigslist. And, a New Jersey-based agent stole
$5,000 in cash from a passenger’s jacket as he was going through security
While in
April, a Texas-based TSA officer stole eight iPads from checked bags, while
another officer stole a $15,000 watch from a passenger at the Los Angeles
International Airport in May.
“It was
very commonplace, very,” Brown said, describing the frequency of theft within
the TSA.
“TSA is
probably the worst personnel manager that we have in the entire federal
government,” said Rep. John Mica, chairman of the House Transportation
Committee. “It is an outrage to the public and, actually, to our aviation
security system.”
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