Baltimore-Washington International (BWI) Airport security officials were alerted by computers on Monday morning when a Texas man’s checked luggage contained an unloaded missile launcher, reported the Capital Gazette.
The man, a resident of Jacksonville, Texas, told Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers he was active duty with the military traveling home from the Middle East and wanted to keep the launcher as a reminder of his service.
.@TSA officers at @BWI_Airport detected this missile launcher in a checked bag early this morning. Man said he was bringing it back from Kuwait as a souvenir. Perhaps he should have picked up a keychain instead! pic.twitter.com/AQ4VBPtViG
— TSAmedia_LisaF (@TSAmedia_LisaF) July 29, 2019
TSA spokesperson Lisa Farbstein said the launcher wasn’t loaded nor a “live device,” but the man was detained for questioning.
She added that military weapons are strictly prohibited in checked or carry-on bags, but also not illegal.
TSA officials questioned the man before releasing him so that he could catch a connecting flight. Government officials confiscated the missile launcher and sent it to the state fire marshal for disposal.
As far as we can see, not yet confirmed by officials, the missile launcher appears to be an AGM-176 Griffin, a lightweight, precision-guided munition developed by Raytheon.
The Griffin confiscated at BWI could be the tail-end of the launcher, as shown in the infographic below:
Another graphic shows the Griffin can be used to guard military bases.
The missile fired out of the launcher is a relatively small warhead and was designed for precision warfare.
Here’s a picture of the missile.
TSA uses their social media accounts to inform travelers that military weapons are prohibited at airports, could result in a fine or jail time.
In March, we reported that TSA confiscated a “rocket-propelled grenade launcher” at Pennsylvania’s Lehigh Valley International Airport.
Farbstein told the Capital Gazette that this is the first time someone tried to sneak a missile launcher through BWI security, though TSA officials regularly confiscate weapons of all sorts.
TSA officials said twenty people had been caught so far this year (as of July 22) for having loaded firearms in their bags at BWI.
“Passengers are permitted to travel with firearms in checked baggage if they are properly packaged and declared,” the TSA said in a release.
“Firearms must be unloaded, packed in a hard-sided case, locked, and packed separately from ammunition. Firearm possession laws vary by state and locality.”
TSA’s Instagram account showcases several posts of some very unusual finds:
via ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/2Mqydc6 Tyler Durden