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View Full Version : Mock IED causes serious delay at YYZ


rotornut
6th Apr 2017, 20:09
'Mock improvised explosive device' causes hours-long flight delay at Pearson - Toronto - CBC News (http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/pearson-united-airlines-flight-547-security-1.4058159)

pfvspnf
7th Apr 2017, 03:21
Was he a journalist ? They've been known to do these things to prove how weak the system is

rotornut
7th Apr 2017, 04:25
Apparently not a journalist. But what the he** is a mock IED and why would a passenger carry one? American man charged in Pearson security breach identified - CityNews (http://www.citynews.ca/2017/04/06/american-citizen-charged-pearson-security-breach/)

peekay4
7th Apr 2017, 15:34
But what the he** is a mock IED and why would a passenger carry one?

Probably a toy (fake) bomb, you can buy these on Amazon, etc., designed for parties, as movie props, etc.

http://www.citynews.ca/wp-content/blogs.dir/sites/10/2015/09/06/COPHu8RUsAAf8GL.jpg

Airbubba
7th Apr 2017, 15:53
Was he a journalist ? They've been known to do these things to prove how weak the system is

Yep, 'Airport-safety advocate' 'Scary Mary' Schiavo tried this stunt a while back for the local 'Live at Five' news. She, of course, copped a walk by claiming that she was a journalist:

Airport-safety Advocate Tied To Bomb Scare

March 14, 1999|By The Washington Post

WASHINGTON - A former Transportation Department inspector general is under investigation for allegedly trying to check luggage that contained what appeared to be a disassembled fake bomb, sources said Saturday.

The discovery of the bag Friday night at the Columbus, Ohio, airport led to the evacuation of hundreds of people from a concourse and the closure of one of two runways for four hours, police said.

Mary Schiavo, the former inspector general, left the federal government in 1996. She wrote a best-selling book Flying Blind, Flying Safe that warned of lax aviation safety and appears frequently on television to comment on air safety. In January, on ABC's Good Morning America, she said she had checked ``fake bomb equipment'' at the same airport but ``didn't get it on planes.''

Richard Morgan, director of public safety at Port Columbus International Airport, said the airport was investigating the incident in conjunction with the FBI and the Federal Aviation Administration. Schiavo is ``one of the names mentioned as being involved,'' Morgan said, adding that investigators would interview her. No charges had been filed.

Schiavo was at the airport at the time of the discovery with a film crew from a local TV station, Morgan said.

Frank Scafidi, an FBI spokesman in Washington, said officials were examining what, if any, laws may have been broken. While it is illegal to threaten to bomb a plane or airport, ``absent a threat, there may not be a violation,'' he said.

Schiavo, whose frequent criticism of the FAA has annoyed many U.S. aviation officials, did not return calls left at her home in Columbus.

Morgan and other officials said the bag in question was checked on an America West flight departing for Washington. At about 5 p.m., America West gate agents notified airport police to say they had a bag that, when passed through an X-ray machine, appeared to contain an explosive device. A passenger had checked the bag for the flight but had not boarded the plane, making agents suspicious.

Increasingly, airlines conduct such ``positive bag matches'' to make sure passengers who check bags board planes. But with 2.3 million checked bags a year on domestic flights, it is difficult to do so on every flight.

Eventually, Morgan said, officials decided the situation was so serious that they evacuated the B-concourse - one of three at the airport - and shut down the airport's north runway to have the bag examined at the end of the runway by a team of explosive experts. No bomb was found in the bag, Morgan said, but he would not describe its contents.

Sources familiar with the probe said the bag contained objects that appeared to look like pieces of an ``explosive device.'' Schiavo's name was on the ticket that accompanied the bag, sources said.

Air traffic controllers had to divert planes to the airport's other runway for four hours, Morgan said. ``This caused a disruption,'' he said.

``I don't know if this rises to a violation of the law,'' an official said. ``But something ought to be done about this.''

Airport-safety Advocate Tied To Bomb Scare (http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/1999-03-14/news/9903140027_1_airport-morgan-bag)

jackieofalltrades
7th Apr 2017, 17:16
If not a journalist or foolish "party-goer" it is quite possible to be a dummy run to test security and screening.

Kewbick
7th Apr 2017, 22:00
What does "he**" mean?

Zombywoof
8th Apr 2017, 17:09
We have a genius here.

rotornut
17th Apr 2017, 16:07
A pretty good imitation of a real IED:

U.S. border patrol releases photo of mock IED after Pearson breach - CityNews (http://www.citynews.ca/2017/04/17/u-s-border-patrol-releases-photo-mock-ied-pearson-breach/)

Zombywoof
29th Apr 2017, 20:17
A pretty good imitation of a real IEDYou are familiar with real IEDs, I take it?

rotornut
30th Apr 2017, 01:05
A real stick of dynamite has the name of the manufacturer plus the weight strength of the unit on the side. Where is the ignition device?