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The SpringNews › topic 79

Homeland Security

topic 79 · 2 responses
~terry Thu, Aug 15, 2002 (16:23) seed
The Dept of Homeland Security measure is winding it's way through Congress, but hasn't been formalized yet.
~terry Thu, Aug 15, 2002 (16:28) #1
Kid's 2-inch gun seized By BOB GRAHAM AIRPORT security staff confiscated a TWO-INCH plastic gun from a toy soldier, it was revealed yesterday. British tourist Judy Powell, 55, bought a GI Joe doll in America as a gift for her seven-year-old grandson George. Security officials at Los Angeles airport found the toy � similar to Action Man � when they searched Judy�s bags before she boarded a flight to London. Then they took the figure out of its box and confiscated its tiny replica Armalite rifle. Judy revealed: �They examined the toy as if it was going to shoot them. �Then they asked me if there were toy grenades as well. I thought they were joking, but they weren�t smiling � they were deadly serious.� �I can understand them wanting to ban weapons or things that look like weapons, but surely common sense has to take over at some point. �I was really angry at first because of the absurdity of the situation, but then I saw the funny side and realised it was simple lunacy. Judy, who bought Beanie Babies for her other grandchildren, joked: �At least THEY weren�t subjected to body searches.� George�s mum Becky, 29, said the lad was �really upset� when he realised his GI Joe had been disarmed. She said: �Even though he�s seven years old George knew the toy was missing an important part. �I explained what had happened, but he just kept shaking his head saying it was silly and �Don�t those people understand the gun was a toy? and couldn�t shoot�.� Airport security has been tightened since the terrorist attacks of September 11, and airlines can now ban anything resembling a weapon. http://www.thesun.co.uk/article/0,,2-2002360334,00.html/
~terry Fri, Feb 27, 2004 (10:42) #2
WASHINGTON � FBI agents destroyed evidence and failed to share other information that raised the possibility that a gang of white supremacist bank robbers may have assisted Timothy McVeigh during the Oklahoma City bombing, according to documents never introduced at McVeigh's trial. Both the FBI supervisor who ran the Oklahoma City investigation and the veteran agent who was in command at the bombing scene say the new evidence, detailed in documents obtained by The Associated Press, is serious enough to warrant reopening the inquiry nine years later. The evidence, never shared with Oklahoma City investigators or defense lawyers, includes documents showing the Aryan Republican Army bank robbers possessed explosive blasting caps similar to those McVeigh stole and a driver's license possibly stolen during the bombing plot. http://ap.cjonline.com/pstories/20040225/1928299.shtml
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