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|    alt.culture.alaska    |    People's weird obsession with Alaska    |    51,804 messages    |
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|    Feel Safe? to All    |
|    George Bush useless union thug TSA let m    |
|    22 Feb 21 00:12:39    |
      XPost: alt.gossip.celebrities, alt.politics.democrats.d, sac.general       XPost: alt.rush-limbaugh       From: union-scum@swa.com              A missing Florida teen with autism made it through a TSA       checkpoint at the Orlando International Airport with a       stranger’s boarding pass — and told authorities that “she just       wanted to fly in an airplane,” according to new reports.              Sade Subbs, 15, who the Apopka Police Department says “suffers       from high-functioning autism,” was last seen around 10 p.m.       Thursday near Lake Jackson Circle in the Orange County city       before she vanished, according to the Orlando Sentinel.              The next day, a Southwest Airlines employee at the airport       spotted the teen wandering around a gate and asked her if she       needed help, according to the report.              Subbs handed her a drink coupon — and the employee searched the       name on the slip, determining that the person had already       boarded an earlier flight, the paper reported.              Authorities were called in to assist, and an officer       “immediately” recognized Subbs as the missing teen, according to       a police report obtained by the outlet.              The teen told the officer she simply wanted to fly on a plane       and “took several buses” from Apopka to get to the airport.              She told him that she found the drink coupon on the floor and       used it to pass through TSA PreCheck — though TSA said she used       a valid and current boarding pass to sneak past, according to       the report. She’s shown on airport surveillance video going       through the PreCheck lane around 1:30 p.m.              “Although she presented someone else’s boarding pass, she was       screened and the TSA screening procedures did assure she posed       no threat to aviation,” the agency said in a statement to ABC       News. “This is an example where the many layers of security       worked.”              She was returned to her family Friday in “good health and       spirits,” and no foul play was suspected, police said.              https://nypost.com/2020/01/14/tsa-let-missing-autistic-teen-       through-security-with-strangers-boarding-pass/                      --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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