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TSA Settles Lawsuit After Allegedly Exposing Woman's Breasts, Laughing About It

January 17, 2011 at 3:37 PM | by | Comments (0)

It turns out that if you pull off a woman's blouse in public, laugh in her face about it, and then leer at her body when she complains, that it might be something over which you can get sued. The TSA just found out as much, hammering out a settlement with Texas woman Lynsie Murley after Corpus Christi International agents humiliated her at a checkpoint. Honestly guys, this is behavior we'd usually expect from Philadelphia agents.

On one hand, this is just another TSA bad apples story, where the wrong combination of douchebags on a shift ends with an abuse of power. But on the other hand, the incident helps crystallize the single, overarching, central debate over American airline security: random screening vs. profiling.

The problem is that there's actually no such thing as "random screening." Someone, somewhere is always making a (usually) realtime decision about which passengers get pulled aside. Profiling kicks the decision up the ladder and makes the selection criteria more explicit, with either computers or security experts making the choice. Random screening bumps the decision downward and gives almost absolute discretion to the agents at checkpoints.

The problem—as we're seeing in this story, and as we know from other incidents—is that sometimes those agents are enormous jackasses. That's partly why, since literally the first months after 9/11, we've been hearing stories about Midwest blonds getting pulled aside and felt up. And perhaps not coincidentally, here we have a Midwest blond making exactly that complaint.

Which isn't to say that we should dump random screening and adopt profiling. There's been something of a democratic discussion for almost a decade now, and Americans have functionally decided the practical and ethical costs of profiling are just too high. But it is to say that when we're adding up costs and benefits we have to take into account these kinds of incidents, where the discretion given to bad apple TSA agents lets them get their rocks off by humiliating passengers.

[Photo: TSA]

Related Stories:
· Woman wins payout from TSA after her breasts were exposed in airport patdown [Daily Mail]
· Airport Security [Jaunted]
· Airports [Jaunted]

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