Warks
Established Member
- Joined
- Oct 9, 2003
- Posts
- 2,492
- Qantas
- LT Silver
- Virgin
- Platinum
So at the end of our three week trip through SYD-LAX-SEA-YVR-EWR-MCO-LAX-SYD at LAX on checking in for our flight on VA2 one of us was selected for the dreaded SSSS. Now you'd think it might be me who travels a fair bit or my wife who is at least an adult but no for some reason VA (or whoever does the selection) chose my 16 year old son (only just 16 by a matter of days too) for the full SSSS. We were going through the VA check-in and the clerk suddenly left the desk and ran off around the corner for about five minutes. He came back with my son's boarding pass with the SSSS on both parts and said to make sure we got stamped before we left. At the time I was a bit nonplussed and thought it was a simple mistake but I wasn't going to get anywhere debating it there.
Upstairs we joined the line and when we got to the first TSA guy with the people counter in hand he spotted the mark and said "oh boy - this must be a joke/mistake" (words to that effect) and said the airlines just seem to pick people based on their names sometimes. He said the good thing was we could all bypass the line and go straight to the screening. He called for his supervisor on his two-way and warned them we were coming. He escorted us forward and we went to our own scanning machine. My son got pulled ahead of us while we put our bags through the machine. I got pulled up for something in my bag I'd forgotten (jar of peanut butter as it turned out) and missed what was going on. Next thing we're being told by the TSA people that my son's clothes and shoes have returned a 'trace' and he needs a secondary screening in private. The staff were all reassuring to us so not bullying or mean at all which was good - my son is not a rough, tough type but tends to hide his emotions so it was hard to tell what he was going through. They'd already given him a simple pat down which I hadn't witnessed.
Supervisor told us that SSSS comes up at the behest of the airline and usually people just get screened and go through. However the 'trace' made it more complicated although they still said it was probably nothing. We'd been in a Disney resort for the last 10 days and together the entire time we'd been away so I knew he hadn't done anything at all - not that I ever expected he would have. So I was informed he had to be taken to a private room for a full pat-down and as he was a minor a parent had to be in attendance which was me.
We went off to a room nearby with all his carry on luggage and shoes in a tray. The attending TSA chatted with us about New York and Orlando weather while we waited for the pat-down guy. He turned up and said that the previous pat-down had been "back of the hands" but this would involve the front of the hands and it would be all over. So my son was subjected to a quite intense pat down which involved sliding the hands all over his clothes. There was even a special explanation of the pat down for the groin area which would involve "three swipes across and three swipes down" which was completed. I can't fault the officer's professionalism and courtesy through all this - they were following procedure to the letter.
We then had to wait for another officer higher up the chain to inspect the shoes. This guy came along and took the linings out of the shoes (which were about four days old, purchased at an Orlando outlet store) and pressed everywhere. He gave them the all clear. We were then thanked for our cooperation (as though we had a choice but I guess I could have carried on more, not that it would have helped). They obviously had no idea what it could have been but didn't explain anything.
So then we were on our way, rather shaken. My son took it all rather well although as I said he holds a lot inside. My wife was feeling much worse about it than anyone being very protective. I just took the attitude that as no one had done anything wrong to just go with it and it would all be fine as it proved. However there's probably a few people who've thought that and ended up at Gitmo (extreme example!)
Now my question is who can I talk to at Virgin about this if they decided he needed screening and how can we avoid this happening again? I've heard once you get SSSSed you get it all the time - this could possibly happen with the 'trace' incident. I'd appreciate any feedback.
I knew a guy who'd been in the military and worked in 'signals' some 20 years previously but always got pulled aside for additional screening on leaving Australia as he obviously raised a red flag based on his knowledge that could be valuable to another power, albeit a bit old. He managed to get himself off the list eventually - that was here though and not the US.
Thanks.
Upstairs we joined the line and when we got to the first TSA guy with the people counter in hand he spotted the mark and said "oh boy - this must be a joke/mistake" (words to that effect) and said the airlines just seem to pick people based on their names sometimes. He said the good thing was we could all bypass the line and go straight to the screening. He called for his supervisor on his two-way and warned them we were coming. He escorted us forward and we went to our own scanning machine. My son got pulled ahead of us while we put our bags through the machine. I got pulled up for something in my bag I'd forgotten (jar of peanut butter as it turned out) and missed what was going on. Next thing we're being told by the TSA people that my son's clothes and shoes have returned a 'trace' and he needs a secondary screening in private. The staff were all reassuring to us so not bullying or mean at all which was good - my son is not a rough, tough type but tends to hide his emotions so it was hard to tell what he was going through. They'd already given him a simple pat down which I hadn't witnessed.
Supervisor told us that SSSS comes up at the behest of the airline and usually people just get screened and go through. However the 'trace' made it more complicated although they still said it was probably nothing. We'd been in a Disney resort for the last 10 days and together the entire time we'd been away so I knew he hadn't done anything at all - not that I ever expected he would have. So I was informed he had to be taken to a private room for a full pat-down and as he was a minor a parent had to be in attendance which was me.
We went off to a room nearby with all his carry on luggage and shoes in a tray. The attending TSA chatted with us about New York and Orlando weather while we waited for the pat-down guy. He turned up and said that the previous pat-down had been "back of the hands" but this would involve the front of the hands and it would be all over. So my son was subjected to a quite intense pat down which involved sliding the hands all over his clothes. There was even a special explanation of the pat down for the groin area which would involve "three swipes across and three swipes down" which was completed. I can't fault the officer's professionalism and courtesy through all this - they were following procedure to the letter.
We then had to wait for another officer higher up the chain to inspect the shoes. This guy came along and took the linings out of the shoes (which were about four days old, purchased at an Orlando outlet store) and pressed everywhere. He gave them the all clear. We were then thanked for our cooperation (as though we had a choice but I guess I could have carried on more, not that it would have helped). They obviously had no idea what it could have been but didn't explain anything.
So then we were on our way, rather shaken. My son took it all rather well although as I said he holds a lot inside. My wife was feeling much worse about it than anyone being very protective. I just took the attitude that as no one had done anything wrong to just go with it and it would all be fine as it proved. However there's probably a few people who've thought that and ended up at Gitmo (extreme example!)
Now my question is who can I talk to at Virgin about this if they decided he needed screening and how can we avoid this happening again? I've heard once you get SSSSed you get it all the time - this could possibly happen with the 'trace' incident. I'd appreciate any feedback.
I knew a guy who'd been in the military and worked in 'signals' some 20 years previously but always got pulled aside for additional screening on leaving Australia as he obviously raised a red flag based on his knowledge that could be valuable to another power, albeit a bit old. He managed to get himself off the list eventually - that was here though and not the US.
Thanks.