TSA Admits Bad Judgment
After Disabled Man
Subjected to Airport
Pat-Down
A Detroit father said agents with the Transportation Security Administration singled out his special-needs son for a pat-down while the family was headed to Disney World, MyFoxDetroit.com reported, an incident that the TSA admitted was a case of bad judgment.
David Mandy said agents at Detroit Metro Airport took his son Drew, 29, and asked him about the padding underneath his pants, which turned out to be adult diapers. Drew, who is severely mentally disabled, had trouble understanding the agents orders because his family said he has the mental capacity of a 2-year-old.
When the father tried to intervene and explain Drews disability, he said the two agents said, Please, sir, we know what were doing.
The agents confiscated a six-inch plastic hammer, something Drew had carried with him for 20 years for comfort. Agents called it a security threat, his father said, adding that they tapped the wall with it and said, See, its hard. It could be used as a weapon.
The family was told theyd have to ship the hammer if they wanted to keep it, David Mandy said. I understand theyre trying to keep people safe, Mandy said told MyFoxDetroit.com. But come on, does he look like a terrorist?
In a statement to FoxNews.com, the TSA said its reviewing the incident but early findings indicate this was an isolated case of bad judgment. The TSA reached out to the Mandy family to apologize and said the mans toy hammer should have never been confiscated.