Workers at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport are
abusing their security badges, even using them to help family and friends skip
the checkpoints to board flights.
Government officials and a top airline executive
were among those caught.
"Sometimes, unfortunately, humans do some
really stupid things," said airport security consultant, Larry Wansley.
At DFW, thousands of employees have Secure
Identification Display Area (SIDA) badges. But SIDA badges can only be
used by employees that are on-duty and they're not allowed to take anyone else
through the door with them.
“You sign a piece of paper when you get your badge
that says I have read and understand the rules,” said DFW Airport spokesman,
David Magana.
But that didn't stop an off-duty Continental
Airlines worker from using his badge to put his family in a van at a cargo
facility and then drive them across the airport ramp to terminal E.
They were caught entering the terminal after a
police officer "heard children laughing" on the airport ramp.
A police report said the worker told officers he,
his wife and two children were "cutting through the terminal to catch a
flight home to Ohio."
DFW police seized his security badge. A
spokeswoman for United Airlines, which merged with Continental, said the worker
involved no longer works for the company.
“Our police department is serious about this,” said
Magana.
Just three weeks ago, DFW police seized a badge
belonging to the Fred Cleveland, a senior vice president and chief operating
officer at American Eagle Airlines.
A report obtained by NBC 5 Investigates said
officers caught Cleveland "escorting his wife through the employee portal
to meet with his daughter who was flying in."
A spokeswoman for American Eagle said "Mr.
Cleveland has a full understanding of what the rule is and will complete
re-training to get his badge back. He does regret the error."
Pilots have been caught abusing badges as well.
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During a personal trip, one off-duty American
Airlines pilot told police "he was aware of the protocol," "But
he wanted to avoid the long lines at the checkpoints."
In another case, an American Airlines flight
attendant was caught sneaking a backpack through an employee entrance and
giving it to her husband boarding a flight to Germany.
American Airlines told NBC 5 Investigates,
"We expect that every employee will follow all rules put in place
that govern an airport badge."
Kelly Skyles, with the AA Flight Attendants Union,
said it’s upsetting when some employees don’t follow the rules, because they’re
potentially putting their co-workers at risk.
“Absolutely it can be very frustrating. I
mean, I understand I make mistakes, we all make mistakes, but we're safety
professionals and we're the last line of defense on that aircraft,” Skyles
said.
It's not just airline workers breaking rules.
DFW police caught a TSA supervisor taking another
worker through an employee door.
Officers seized a badge from a Federal Aviation
Administration manager caught using it to board a flight for personal reasons.
And police even stopped an analyst who works for the
DFW airport board, the agency that issues the security badges, as she escorted
her husband through an employee door to board a flight.
“The vast majority of people working at the airport
understand and follow the rules without any problem,” Magana said.
However records show most of the recent security
violations at DFW were caused by workers with security badges.
Out of more than 140 confirmed security violations
in two years – at least 106 were linked to badge holding employees and vendors.
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