Student
challenges security
By FOSTER KLUG
Associated Press
BALTIMORE A college student who told authorities
he placed box cutters and other banned items aboard
two airliners to test security was charged Monday with
taking a dangerous weapon aboard an aircraft and was
released without bail.
Nathaniel Heatwole, 20, told federal agents he went
through normal security procedures at airports in Baltimore
and Raleigh-Durham, N.C. Once aboard, he said he hid
the banned items in compartments in the planes
rear lavatories.
A preliminary hearing was set for Nov. 10.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Harvey Eisenberg said the government
was not seeking detention, and U.S. Magistrate Judge
Susan K. Gauvey freed Heatwole on his own recognizance.
Although Heatwole sent an e-mail to federal authorities
saying he had placed the items aboard two specific Southwest
Airlines flights, it took authorities nearly five weeks
to find them.
The judge set a number of conditions for Heatwoles
release, including that he not enter any airport or
board any airplane.
Heatwole sat stone-faced during the hearing. His parents
were in the courtroom but did not greet or acknowledge
him during the hearing and did not comment afterward.
The charge against Heatwole, a junior at Guilford College
in Greensboro, N.C., carries a sentence of up to 10
years in prison.
Discovery of the items Thursday aboard Southwest planes
that landed in New Orleans and Houston triggered stepped-up
inspections of the entire U.S. commercial air fleet
roughly 7,000 planes. But after consulting with
the FBI, the Transportation Security Administration
rescinded the inspection order and no other suspicious
bags were found.
Deputy TSA Administrator Stephen McHale said Mondays
court action makes clear that renegade acts to
probe airport security for whatever reason will not
be tolerated, pure and simple.
Amateur testing of our systems do not show us
in any way our flaws, McHale said. We know
where the vulnerabilities are and we are testing them
... This does not help.
An FBI affidavit obtained Monday by The Associated Press
said Heatwole breached security at Raleigh-Durham airport
on Sept. 12 the day after the two-year anniversary
of the 2001 terrorist attacks. He did it again Sept.
15 at Baltimore-Washington International Airport, the
affidavit said.
His bags contained box cutters, modeling clay made to
look like plastic explosives, matches and bleach hidden
in sunscreen bottles, the affidavit said. Inside were
notes with details about when and where the items were
carried aboard.
Since Sept. 11, 2001, when 19 hijackers used box cutters
to take over four airliners, box cutters and bleach
are among the items that cannot be carried onto planes.
On Sept. 15, the TSA received an e-mail from Heatwole
saying he had information regarding six security
breaches at the Raleigh-Durham and Baltimore-Washington
airports between Feb. 7 and Sept. 14, the FBI affidavit
said.
The TSA did not send the e-mail to the FBI until last
Friday.
Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge, whose department
includes TSA, said officials will go back and
look at our protocol for handling such e-mails.
He said the agency gets a high volume of e-mails about
possible threats and that officials decided that Heatwole
wasnt an imminent threat.
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