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Texas TSA Bill Targeting Groping, Airport Pat-Downs Approved By State Lawmakers

Texas Tsa Bill

By JIM VERTUNO   06/28/11 09:35 AM ET   AP

AUSTIN, Texas -- Texas lawmakers gave their initial backing Monday to legislation that would criminalize intentional, inappropriate touching during airport security pat-downs, but it was so watered down it provoked angry outbursts from conservative activists, who decried it as toothless.

The new versions of the bill would still make it a misdemeanor punishable with up to a year in jail to touch a person's sexual organs and other sensitive areas. But now they give security officials a defense to prosecution if they act with "reasonable suspicion" that the search is necessary.

That change prompted chants of "Traitor!" by a small group of protesters in the Capitol rotunda shortly after the House cast a preliminary vote in favor of the bill.

The protesters then gathered in the Senate gallery and several called out "Treason!" to senators below. The Senate passed its version several hours after the protesters left.

The Republican-controlled chambers have until Wednesday to resolve several differences between their bills before sending one to Gov. Rick Perry to consider signing it into law.

Supporters of the bill complained the changes make the penalties unenforceable. Texas law already bans public servants from subjecting someone to a search he or she "knows is unlawful."

About two dozen people showed up to testify in support of the bill in the Senate Committee on Transportation and Homeland Security, then opposed it when they learned the bill was going to be changed on the recommendation of Texas Attorney General Greg Abbott, a Republican.

"The simple act of opting out of the body scanners is going to be reasonable suspicion," said Heather Fazio of Austin. "That is unacceptable."

Sen. Dan Patrick, R-Houston, defended the change, saying the bill still sends a strong message to Transportation Security Administration security screeners to keep their wandering hands off Texans.

Patrick noted that the TSA announced last week that it would try to reduce the number of pat-downs performed on children.

"The goal is to get the TSA to change their policy," Patrick said. "TSA is going change their policy because Texas is taking the lead."

TSA spokesman Greg Soule said Americans expect authorities to use "effective methods to keep the traveling public safe" and that the agency will review the bill if passed into law.

All of the testimony for the bill has concentrated on stories of people being searched and included no actual examples of TSA officers being reprimanded or disciplined for improper touching.

Although dismissed last week as a "publicity stunt" by Republican House Speaker Joe Straus, the issue has become a top priority for the libertarian wing of the Texas GOP.

Few Texas airports are equipped with full-body scanners, meaning there often is no other screening option for travelers picked out for what TSA calls an enhanced pat down. Opponents have simmered over procedures they consider a violation of their Constitutional right against unwarranted search and seizure.

Texas made it a full-blown fight with the TSA last month when the Texas House voted to criminalize intrusive pat-downs. That version appeared ready to pass the Senate until John E. Murphy, the U.S. attorney for the Western District of Texas, warned lawmakers that it would interfere with the TSA's ability to ensure travelers' safety.

Murphy's letter to legislators said if the original bill passed, the federal government would probably go to court to block it and the TSA would likely be required to cancel flights if it cannot ensure passenger safety.

TSA officials say advance imaging technology and pat downs are the most effective way to detect threats such as explosives made of plastics, liquids or gels designed to not be detected by traditional metal detectors.

The issue prompted some small but loud demonstrations outside the House and Senate chambers last month and many of them showed up again for Monday's vote. Texas Gov. Rick Perry, a Republican considering a run for president, added the pat-down bill to the agenda of the 30-day special session he called on May 31.

But the bill has lost significant momentum over the last week.

Straus appeared to strike a major blow against the original version of the bill when he warned it would hurt commercial aviation in Texas and would make the state a "laughingstock."

Monday's changes further eroded support.

"TSA is abusing people," said Don Hart of Austin, who opposed the new version approved Monday. "TSA will be empowered to keep doing what they are doing."

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AUSTIN, Texas -- Texas lawmakers gave their initial backing Monday to legislation that would criminalize intentional, inappropriate touching during airport security pat-downs, but it was so watered do...
AUSTIN, Texas -- Texas lawmakers gave their initial backing Monday to legislation that would criminalize intentional, inappropriate touching during airport security pat-downs, but it was so watered do...
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04:11 PM on 06/30/2011
Hoo-Ray T-S-A!!!!

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/43590961/ns/travel-news/
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08:52 AM on 06/30/2011
According to texas morons, any bank that has never been robbed should not be protected from bank robbers. That's exactly what they're saying with this ridiculous legislation. No plane has been crashed into a building since the TSA took over commercial flight security, therefore no terrorist attacks need to be protected against. Moronism has reached a new low.
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04:11 PM on 06/30/2011
I've never been x-rayed or patted down because I wanted to open a checking account. Reasonable safety measures are one thing. The TSA is not reasonable.

Again, you're a capitulating cretin.
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08:00 AM on 07/01/2011
No, just a frequent flier hoping to not be slammed into a building. The TSA is extremely reasonable. Ignoring legitimate security concerns is not reasonable.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jhnnxn
Won't say it face to face? Don't post it online!
08:47 AM on 06/30/2011
" Those who would give up esential liberty, to purchase a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety" Benjamin Franklin.

We need to ditch the TSA and the entire Patriot Act and accept the fact that there are inherent risks involved with liberty. For all its potential bad outcomes liberty provides one huge compensation. You are free to exercise it or not. If flying without everyone being groped scares you, don't fly.
HUFFPOST PUNDIT
JShankel
I want my country forward
12:22 PM on 06/29/2011
I love it.  Americans all nod their head in agreement that waterboarding isn't torture so long as all your organs remain intact, but then start crying "tyranny" when they're patted down at the airport.

Did you make it through TSA with your organs intact?  Yes?  Then no harm came to you.  Riiiiight?
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janie@atthelake
Keep Austin Weird
07:04 PM on 06/29/2011
Hey friend! Senate Bill 29 just died! (publicity stunt from Perry) Next up....its Israel..
07:34 AM on 06/29/2011
We had an idiot who tried to light his shoes and another who tried to light his penis. Based on these two, we subject the entire nation to being patted down by minimum wage mall cops who themselves don't have to go through this. If TSA policis ae so effective, why is rest of the world not following? By far the most pleseant airport in the world is Changi Airport in Singapore, despite being a hub for SE Asia and located next to Indonesia where extremism is alive and well. You feel safe there despite no such intrusions. Do Singaporeans care less about terrorism? No, they are much more realistic and understand that if they subject their citizens to such scrutiny what is the message here? To reward terrorists by modifying our behavior and giving up our freedoms?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fisher1949
06:16 AM on 06/29/2011
Someone needs to do something. Both the Senate and House Oversight Committees have been indifferent to the arrogance and duplicity of Director Pistole in testimony, while he has lost all credibility with the public. In the same week he defended this agency for frisking a six year old girl in New Orleans, TSA were removing a diaper from a dying 95 year old woman in Florida and screeners in Houston and Los Angeles arrested for theft from passengers.

Congress has permitted TSA to promote an agenda of passenger-focused paranoia without consideration for the realities of airline safety. In the past eight months, TSA has been plagued by reports of agent thefts, sex crimes, assaults, drug trafficking, security breaches, drug use and dereliction of duty. Over sixty screeners have been implicated in that brief time without one notable success to offset this abysmal record.

http://www.travelunderground.org/index.php?pages/fisher-masterlist/

Once cockpit doors were reinforced and pilots armed a terrorist could not gain control of a plane a repeat of 9/11 became impossible. A human is physically incapable of concealing enough explosive to bring down an airliner yet t TSA allows 60% of cargo on airliners to go unscreened and ignores ground based attacks.

Over a million Americans have died in defense of our Constitutional liberties and it is shameful that the fearful and cowardly among us would squander those hard won rights on the miniscule chance that a few might die.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
traceymarie
the President is black, deal with it
12:01 PM on 06/29/2011
the 95 year old story has been debunked. The daughter said her mother had to remove her ONLY diaper on a several hour flight. No witnesses have cooberrated this insane and drama filled lie.
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05:31 AM on 06/29/2011
Call me a crusty old cynic if you will, but the net effect of the 'softened' bill is ti allow the TSA to pick and choose who it gropes. Given that Texas is home to the likes of the Bush crime family and frequently gets visits from their best friends, the Saudi Royal family, this means that the"real" people can travel unmolested. The hoi polloi will, of course, still get their bums felt.

Too cynical, you say? I was once in business with a very wealthy family that had relatives high up in all the local political positions in their borough. Including mayor. They lived in a series of clifftop residences in a quiet part of town overlooking a harbour. The only motorway [freeway] going from their borough to the international airport ran right up to their doorsteps and stopped right there.

More of the same.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
joshdiesel
No man is an island. NOTHING is done alone!
02:27 AM on 06/29/2011
Another silly and meaningless law from republicans. I wonder how many jobs this will create...
12:04 AM on 06/29/2011
Well....what if Texas secedes from the union? Anyone?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ascoli
06:25 AM on 06/29/2011
Good riddance
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dayzee10
Are you a master builder or a master butcher?
09:18 AM on 06/29/2011
Dick Perry promised secession......what is the hold up? Hurry up get er done Dick!
10:20 PM on 06/28/2011
Baggage handlers?
02:09 AM on 06/29/2011
Yeah you know...those people who pugnican polyticians hire when they have a ton of baggage!
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onehenry
Tea bags lose their flavor
08:56 PM on 06/28/2011
What a dumb exercise of legislation. Just drop it already and work on something serious.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheMilesHome
In the Conservatory, with a Pipe Wrench.
08:54 PM on 06/28/2011
Here's one I'm on the fence on.

Hate the intrusion. But not that much.

Hate that a plane may be commandeered and used for nefarious purposes. But not that probable.

I'm more concerned with the Patriot Act.

Oh well... I'm on the who cares list.
madkoz
Dog is my co-pilot
07:28 PM on 06/28/2011
There is no need for security because no one on any plane actually trusts anyone else on the plane. Stand up and stretch you got ten rows of people looking at you, scratch an inappropriate area and you get scowls galore, go to the bathroom longer than five minutes and eyes begin to bore holes through the door. Anyone foolish enough to sneeze at the wrong time will get four boots to the head and grannies purse as well. Its the cargo area I worry about.
libertyanne
Red-haired Freedom lover
07:25 PM on 06/28/2011
I actually agree with him on this one. If all 50 states would do this we'd have the TSA re-thinking their policies. They couldn't very well ban all commercial flights throughout the country. After the recent story about this poor 90 year-old woman the problems with this agency are obvious.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LIES AND DAMN LIES
THIS IS THE REPUBLICAN PARTY
08:27 PM on 06/28/2011
Don't wanna be searched don't FLY!
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08:47 PM on 06/28/2011
Straw man argument, reasonable searches are perfectly acceptable and legal. The objection here is too the recent "enhanced" pat-down searches which violate the constitution and technically mach the legal definition for misdemeanor sexual assault. We can provide a safer/legal aviation environment with bomb sniffing dogs and behavioral profiling.
11:28 PM on 06/28/2011
Change that to, "don't fly in America" and you might realize that you are not as American as you think.
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daily randy
Danger, Will Robinson! Danger!
06:32 PM on 06/28/2011
I rather enjoy my weekly pat downs by the TSA. I get in the body scanning machine, then they tell me that an "anomally" showed up on the scan (in my underwear no less), two men escort me to a curtained off area, I put my arms out and my palms up, and they pat me down all over. Normally, I'd have to pay up to $100 for a massage therapist to do this. But the TSA does it for free! And afterwards, my skin feels all tingly and my sexual areas feel alive. Thanks TSA! Because of you, I'm considering having my nipples pierced as well.
madkoz
Dog is my co-pilot
07:24 PM on 06/28/2011
You really are randy.
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daily randy
Danger, Will Robinson! Danger!
05:25 PM on 06/29/2011
Honestly, I'm just trying to make lemonaide out of lemons. If I have to be subjectded to a pat down every time I walk into that body scanner, I might as well create a scenario in my head that makes it seem all worth while. I had one TSA agent tell me afterwards to just remove my jewelry before arriving at the airport ... and put it back in after passing through the scanner. I looked at him for a second and thought about it. And then I told him, "You know, I think I'm going to draw a line at my penis. I'll jump through all the hoops and take off my shoes and belt and so on. But I think I'm going to put my foot down and tell the government that they can't tell me what to do with my penis." He nodded, smiled, and said, "I hear ya."