Jonathan Cobb was scheduled to travel to Chicago from Houston’s George W. Bush International Airport on February 25, 2019. Prior to boarding his ticketed flight, Cobb entered a TSA screening area. After passing through the metal detector without any alarms, Cobb was randomly selected for additional screening and told to proceed through the Advanced Imaging Technology (AIT) scanner. Although Cobb offered to remove his belt because he feared it would cause an alarm, the AIT operator instructed him to leave the belt on. The machine did alarm and Cobb was told that he must submit to a third search—a pat-down—of his body.
Cobb politely and calmly refused, telling the agents that he would rather leave the airport and miss his flight than submit to a pat-down. After Cobb refused to submit to the pat-down, he was taken to a private area, where a TSA supervisor told him he must submit to a pat-down because of the AIT alarm. Cobb explained that his refusal to endure a pat-down search was based upon a traumatic TSA screening in 2012 when he was selected for a pat-down, which he found excessively invasive and demoralizing. However, Cobb offered to allow a full visual inspection of his person or to reenter the AIT scanner without his belt. TSA agents reported the matter to local law enforcement.
When Cobb continued to insist, calmly and firmly, that he would not submit to the pat-down and would instead choose to miss his flight, police escorted Cobb out of the airport. Two months later, Cobb received a notice that he was being fined $2,660 dollars for “interfering” with TSA screening. In coming to Cobb’s defense, Rutherford Institute attorneys argued that Cobb had a Fourth Amendment right to opt out of traveling rather than be subjected to an objectionable pat-down search by TSA screening agents. Affiliate attorney Jerri Lynn Ward of Garlo Ward, P.C., assisted The Rutherford Institute in defending Cobb.
The Rutherford Institute, a nonprofit civil liberties organization, defends individuals whose constitutional rights have been violated and educates the public about threats to their freedoms.
Click here to read The Rutherford Institute’s stated objections to the TSA's fines against Cobb.
This press release is also available at www.rutherford.org.
Source: https://bit.ly/2G6U8kh
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