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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums18 Government Agents Used Terrorism as an Excuse to Terrorize This 9-Year-Old With Pacemaker

A nine-year-old boy with hopes of becoming a pilot was traumatized by TSA agents at the Phoenix Sky Harbor Airport when he was told that, because of his pacemaker for his heart condition, he was ineligible for screening.
Chille Bergstrom had been screened countless times before. His mother, Ali Bergstrom, told Anti-Media they have flown millions of miles without incident and often go to the airport early so Chille can watch the planes take off and land.
But on Saturday morning, he was told by TSA agent and manager, Agent Potts-Obrien, that Chille would require a special exemption to make it through security. Normally, he is able to have his hands swiped with the TSAs swab kits. But this time, his mother was told she would have to have all of her bags individually checked if she wanted her son to make it through security.
Bergstrom says Potts-OBrien told her all of the other screenings Chille had endured without issue were performed incorrectly by all other TSA agents.
Baffled by the change in policy, Bergstrom says she asked Potts-OBrien to check with a supervisor, whom she assumed would clear up the situation. After waiting about fifteen minutes for Mr. Maynard Williams, a security manager, to arrive in the terminal, Bergstrom and her son were told, once again, that TSA policy did not allow Chille to receive a hand swipe security check.
According to the TSA, however, individuals with pacemakers, who cannot pass through metal detectors for risk of malfunction, are eligible for alternative screenings. One of those is a traditional pat down the alternative some people choose to body scanners which Bergstrom says she requested for her son. The agents refused, and they also denied him the option of passing through a body scanner.
Bergstrom said in a Facebook post that, as they waited, Strangers were literally crying along with Chille, giving me their names and numbers as witnesses to this horrific situation!
Gwenette Bradley was another airline passenger who required special TSA attention that day. Because of a recent back surgery, Bradley was pulled off the the side area where the Bergstroms were waiting for approval. She said Ali and Chille had already been seated and waiting when she first saw them. During that time, she says she watched numerous agents crowd around her and her son, who sat on her lap. At this point, she says, Bergstrom was hysterical and frustrated that TSA agents would not allow her son through. Bergstrom says she became particularly upset when she was told her son would not be allowed to fly.
Bradley also clarified that, given the unprofessional circumstance, Bergstrom was well within her rights to be upset.
It was very traumatic for her, and I really felt bad for her, she said. Bradley observed that Bergstrom had provided paperwork to the TSA agents, but even as she presented the necessary documents, the authorities showed her no sympathy. Rather, she says, they encircled her, refused to speak directly to her, and whispered to each other. They all just talked among themselves like she wasnt there. And I thought what in the world would possess them to do that? It just wasnt necessary at all.
It was a such a scene, Bradley recounted, that the agents who had been assisting her rushed over to the gaggle of agents gathered around the Bergstroms.
I kept thinking, where is the head of this bunch that will walk over here and say Enough, get these people where we need to go, and lets move on, Bradley said. But nobody did that for her.
She also said it felt like the agents were trying to minimize the visibility of the ordeal.
Then they start rushing me off, and I thought, Yeah, you guys dont want anybody to watch this, she said.
They really overstepped their boundaries, she said.
Bergstrom says that, by the end of the ordeal, she was surrounded by 18 government agents, including ten TSA agents, four Phoenix police officers and someone she was told was the head of the Department of Homeland Security for the entire airport.
They all approach us and surround us and stared at us, and it was terrifying. . . . My son has had nightmares now for two nights.
None of them acknowledged her plight or admitted that, perhaps, Potts-OBrien and Williams had been incorrect at first.
Rather, she was told he was ineligible for screening and that the TSA had previously stopped a child with a pacemaker who would have attempted to blow up a plane. When Bergstrom asked for more specifics, the agent (predictably) told her he was not at liberty to divulge. Ultimately, the 18 agents decision to single out the Bergstroms can also be attributed to the threat of terrorism considering the TSA and its regulations which these officers enforced incorrectly were created as a direct response to 9/11.
Even Chille, a young child, knew to stand up for himself. He reminded the agents that he had never had an issue and never required an exemption to travel.
Bergstrom told us she worried what other threats were passing through security while over a dozen government agents were crowding around her and Chille. She said Chille reminded one TSA agent, Officer Fellner, that 95% of weapons make it through TSA screening without ever being spotted.
Thats a lie, she says Fellner told Chille. In reality, Fellner was the one lying. A report last year from the Office of the Inspector General found TSA agents failed to detect weapons in security screenings 95% of the time, a finding that prompted then-TSA Acting Administrator Melvin Carraway to be reassigned to a different department within Homeland Security.
Eventually, Bergstrom was told that all of her items had to be screened because her bags had triggered the security alarm during screening, an assertion Bergstrom disputes.
[It was a] complete lie. My sons jaw dropped, she said. Nothing triggered the alarm. Thats why theyve been sitting here untouched. No TSA agent here has even look at it or touched it because they know that none of the alarms were triggered. Everything was fine. We were all passed through. The issue is that he has a pacemaker and he needs an alternate screening.
She even told the agent to his face it was untrue. She invited them to rescan the bags to prove the security alarm went off and was told she would not be allowed to fly, which is when she became extremely upset. One TSA agent stood up for Bergstrom and reminded the agents she had already given permission to search her bags. They proceeded to take every single item out of her bags and perform swabs on them. Then, after insisting Chille could not be screened throughout the ordeal, the agents told her he had to be screened and hand swiped.
I have been asking for this the whole time, Chille told them.
Bergstrom summarized the absurdity of the ordeal in her Facebook post:
more at http://anonhq.com/18-government-agents-used-terrorism-excuse-terrorize-9-year-old-pacemaker/

Hekate
(96,880 posts)It needs a complete overhaul.
Divine Discontent
(21,056 posts)They're the very reason I don't fly. Knuckleheads with little common sense are more than I can endure while traveling. Thanks, Dubya!
Photographer
(1,142 posts)MineralMan
(148,741 posts)It's a three-day drive each way from Minnesota to get to my parent's home in California, but only four hours by air.
In all my trips by air since the TSA was handling security, I've never had nor seen any problems like the one in that story from Anonymous. Never. I'll fly, thanks.
Photographer
(1,142 posts)Screaming because you didn't get 2A.
MineralMan
(148,741 posts)Somehow, that doesn't make any sense to me...
Odin2005
(53,521 posts)MineralMan
(148,741 posts)How often do such incidents occur, I wonder. I've never seen anything like on any of the many flights I have taken since the TSA was put into place. What I've seen is a fairly simple system to get through. I've had a few pat downs, had my carry ons screened, and other minor delays, but that's it. Each time, I was told why and the process took just a few minutes.
I suspect that situations like this one are very, very rare. There may be even more to the story that wasn't presented by this particular website. I don't know. Anonymous isn't known for its accuracy in representing things like this, quite frankly, nor is theantimedia.org, the original source of the story. Both are anti-government advocacy sites, pretty much.
I still fly. I will continue to fly. My experiences have been fine, overall.
lpbk2713
(43,203 posts)Park your brains at the door when you take a job like that.
ProfessorPlum
(11,454 posts)doesn't this constitute theft?
nothing like police state bureaucracy to restore everyone's faith in the system.
Patiod
(11,816 posts)I'm sorry to hear this kid was handled by people who seem out of control.
I was happy, though, to see on a recent flight that they have stopped the shoes-off, separate bag for liquids thing (and I was in the hoi-polloi line, while my colleagues who travel more were in the RapidPass line).
They did have a dog sniffing everyone, and he became particularly interested in my bag. The handler must have recognized the type of interest he showed, because he shouted at me to KEEP MOVING! I'm guessing the smell of Cat Sleeps Here probably provokes one response, where plastique probably provokes another....