Brooklyn man flees JFK Airport after TSA detects loaded gun in his carry-on bag

Authorities say a man fled John F. Kennedy International Airport after Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers caught a 9 mm handgun loaded with seven bullets in his carry-on bag Monday.

News 12 Staff

Dec 30, 2020, 2:41 PM

Updated 1,444 days ago

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Brooklyn man flees JFK Airport after TSA detects loaded gun in his carry-on bag
Authorities say a man fled John F. Kennedy International Airport after Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers caught a 9 mm handgun loaded with seven bullets in his carry-on bag Monday.
As the man’s carry-on bag was being screened at the checkpoint, TSA officers spotted the gun on the X-ray machine’s monitor and called for the man to step aside, at which time he fled.
Police were alerted and determined that the man ran out of the terminal and jumped into a taxi. Police confiscated the man’s carry-on bag with the gun.
TSA has the identity of the man because when he fled, he left behind his small pull-handle carry-on bag, a duffle bag, his shoes, a vest, some cash, his New York State learner’s permit, his passport and his boarding pass.
A resident of Brooklyn, New York, the man was ticketed to fly to Atlanta with several companions. Officials interviewed the man’s traveling companions before allowing them to catch their flight.
A typical first offense for carrying a loaded handgun into a TSA checkpoint is $4,100. The penalty can go as high as $13,000, depending on mitigating circumstances, and this individual did not cooperate with authorities when he was caught with a gun. Civil penalties for weapons brought to the airport applies to travelers with or without concealed gun carry permits because even though an individual may have a concealed carry permit, it does not allow for a firearm to be carried onto an airplane. If that traveler is a TSA PreCheck member, that person will lose TSA PreCheck status for a period of time.
TSA is reminding passengers that they are permitted to travel with firearms in checked baggage if they are properly packaged and declared. Firearms must be unloaded, packed in a hard-sided case, locked, and packed separately from ammunition. The case must be taken to the airline check-in counter to declare the gun. It will then be placed in the belly of the airplane for transport.