Watch CBS News

Sen. Schumer: Airline, Airport Workers Should Be Screened For Guns Daily

ALBANY, N.Y. (CBSNewYork/AP) - Sen. Charles Schumer called Wednesday for daily federal screening of airport and airline workers for weapons following last month's arrests of five men accused of smuggling guns through the New York and Atlanta airports.

The New York Democrat, joined in Washington by Brooklyn District Attorney Kenneth Thompson, said he's asking the Transportation Security Administration to immediately require all U.S. airports to screen staff when they start work.

"In this day and age of terrorism, rampant drug dealing and gun smuggling, we just can't be too careful," Schumer said.

Currently, pilots and flight crews, as well as passengers, pass through the TSA metal detectors. But Schumer said many employees who work in the secure sections of airports are exempt.

Schumer called the loophole "mind-boggling" and said criminals or terrorists could smuggle drugs, guns and explosives onto planes. While the TSA does a good job with background checks, he said they are "hardly foolproof" and not nearly as effective as metal detectors.

The TSA has the authority to do the screening now and does not need a new law, Schumer said. He also said it would be an inexpensive fix that, at most, would add "pennies" to the cost of an airline ticket.

Schumer said the gun-running scheme was "frighteningly bad news" that did not require a sophisticated smuggling scheme. Instead it was "a cakewalk for criminals to pull off," he said.

And the problem goes beyond Atlanta airport, Schumer and Thompson said. Very few, if any, airports require screening of these employees, Schumer said.

Authorities have charged five people, including an airline baggage handler, with illegally shipping firearms between Atlanta and New York on passenger jets, including 153 guns seized during the seven-month investigation.

Former Delta baggage handler, 31-year-old Eugene Harvey, is among those accused of helping smuggle guns aboard passenger jets bound for New York City.

Investigators said the guns — some loaded — were hidden in carry-on baggage.

Harvey was arrested Saturday in Atlanta. A FBI affidavit said there was enough evidence to charge him with trafficking firearms, violating airport security and aiding others in the scheme.

An alleged accomplice, former Delta employee Mark Quentin Henry, was arrested in New York on Dec. 10 in a weapons trafficking investigation after an undercover agent bought a gun from one of his accomplices, according to the affidavit filed on Dec. 19. The investigation targeted firearms that were being sold in New York that had been purchased in the Atlanta area.

"The ease by which airport employees are able to smuggle weapons and other contraband onto our commercial airliners is troubling and warrants immediate scrutiny and inspection," Thompson said. That investigation, with the New York Police Department and federal authorities, identified "gaping holes in our nation's airport security," he said.

Schumer said the basic response from TSA is that screening would be too complex to do, because many employees go back and forth between secure and unsecure locations.

The TSA did not immediately reply Wednesday to requests for comment.

You Might Also Be Interested In:

(TM and © Copyright 2015 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2014 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

View CBS News In
CBS News App Open
Chrome Safari Continue
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.