![]() ![]() The supervisor came over and told me that since I was flying during the day, I would not need to use my CPAP on the flight and so it was not allowed. I repeated that it was for my medical equipment. The agent that pulled my CPAP and the water told me it wasn't allowed. I told him it was distilled water for my CPAP. The agent monitoring the xray told me that water was not allowed. Yesterday I flew out of LAS (my home airport). That is a pain in the ***, but I accept it as a normal part of traveling these days. ![]() Normally, I am pulled aside for secondary as they need to swab my CPAP and test the water. I bring the water with me when I am arriving at my destination late, as it is sometimes quite difficult to find it late at night. I have done so for over a year on probably about 50% of my flights. I do not need an entire gallon, so I have a bottle I fill with the amount I need that fits nicely in my CPAP bag. I carry an 18 ounce bottle of distilled water. I travel with a CPAP and it requires distilled water for the humidifier. I kinda feel that it is a little different than that thread, but it is your call. The peace of mind, especially if I’m travelling with my wife and children, would be well worth it.Moderators, please feel free to add this to the Contact Lens Solution thread if you feel it is appropriate. I’ll chose the latter every time, even if it means having to get to the airport earlier and being comparatively more inconvenienced. “I gather that you might think that is an imposition on you.”Ī) boarding a plane with passengers who’ve gone through TSA-style screening (with failure rates of up to 95% in finding replica bombs and weapons carried by undercover agents), but which has been shorn of disabled teenage girls …ī) boarding a plane with passengers who’ve gone through competent, serious Israeli-style profiling … But, if they do, I’d bet that innocent person taken to the ground would be a young adult male whose behavior and/or papers and identification fit a profile and raise red flags … and not an obviously disabled Israeli teenage girl travelling with her Israeli mother. “You don’t think the Israelis sometimes make mistakes and take the wrong person to the ground?” You mean we have many more flights per capita than the Israelis? But they’ve gotten pretty good at harassing law abiding citizens in the name of security.įollow Kemberlee on Twitter volume of traffic is too high.” Their job is to stop or mitigate threats of terrorism - something they’ve not done. The TSA was a post-9/11 reaction, one its creator has since worked to undo. None of them would comment citing the suit, but Sari Koshetz of TSA released a statement that said, “Passengers can call ahead of time to learn more about the screening process for their particular needs or medical situation.”Ĭohen said after all the help here, she can’t believe it ended like this. “Here we were with nowhere to go, not even a toothbrush, our bags had gone to Chattanooga,” said Cohen.Īuthorities later threw out the charges but the family filed a lawsuit against the Memphis Airport, Airport Police, and the Transportation Security Administration. Hannah was arrested, booked and on the night she should have been celebrating the end of her treatment, she was locked up in Jail East. “She’s trying to get away from them but in the next instant, one of them had her down on the ground and hit her head on the floor. “They wanted to do further scanning, she was reluctant, she didn’t understand what they were about to do,” said her mother Shirley Cohen.Ĭohen told us she tried to tell TSA agents her daughter is partially deaf, blind in one eye, paralyzed, and easily confused, but said she was kept at a distance by police. This time, an unarmed Hannah, set off the metal detector at a security checkpoint ![]()
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