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Decorated, wounded Marine treated 'shamefully' by security screeners

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  • Decorated, wounded Marine treated 'shamefully' by security screeners

    Wearing the uniform of the Few and Proud doesn’t rate preferential treatment from the Transportation Security Administration or California capitol security officers, retired Marine Cpl. Nathan Kemnitz recently found.

    Kemnitz, severely injured in 2004 in a roadside bomb attack in Fallujah, has limited use of his right arm and cannot lift it above his head. So when security guards at the state capitol building in Sacramento, Calif., asked him to remove his dress blue blouse “because he was wearing too much metal,” and TSA asked him to raise his arms above his head for the full-body scanner at Sacramento International Airport, he could not comply.

    “My right arm doesn’t work. It’s a lot of hassle for me to do that,” Kemntiz said.

    At the state capitol, the Marine’s refusal to remove his uniform top grew into a heated exchange between Kemnitz, a friend who was accompanying him and security officers.

    At the airport, bystanders stared as the TSA security screener looked under Kemnitz’s medals, ran his hands under the Marine’s waistband and swabbed his shoes for explosives.

    “What does a uniform and heroism represent if our own citizens — in this case employees of the TSA and security personnel — have no regard for them?” wrote Kemnitz’s escort, Patricia Martin, to Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki following the incidents.

    Martin took photos and disseminated them to family, friends and members of the media.

    “I feel so strongly that you need to know just how shamefully even a Purple Heart recipient/disabled veteran can be treated by some TSA and security employees,” she said.

    Kemnitz said after the incidents that he was not as annoyed with TSA officers as he was with a security screener at the California state capitol, whom he described as rude and unapologetic.

    Kemnitz was visiting the building to be honored as his legislative district’s veteran of the year.

    “At some places I’m treated like royalty and at some like a terrorist. There’s got to be something in the middle,” he said.

    The incident was not the first to spark similar outrage. In January, NBC journalist Luke Russert tweeted his irritation at an enhanced security screening at Reagan National Airport of a troop wearing a prosthetic.

    “Making Wounded Warriors with prosthetic legs go through extra explosives screening. #fail,” Russert wrote.

    In March, bystanders notified Rep. Duncan Hunter, R-Calif., about what they perceived to be maltreatment of a double amputee by TSA screeners at Phoenix’s Sky Harbor Airport.

    Concurrent with that incident, TSA announced it had changed its rules to eliminate a requirement that injured troops remove their shoes, jackets or hats. But to receive the expedited service, TSA asks affected personnel to call the agency’s Military Severely Injured Joint Service Operations Center before traveling.

    TSA also offers escorted “curb-to-gate service” for injured or ill personnel who request it as well as the TSA Pre program to service members with a military common access card at four airports: Charlotte Douglas International Airport in North Carolina, Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, and Washington Dulles International Airport.

    The Senate Sergeant-At-Arms is responsible for security screenings at the California capitol building. No one was available Friday to speak with the media regarding the incident.

    I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool

  • #2
    Can't anyone get a uniform and impersonate a soldier?

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by Craizie View Post
      Can't anyone get a uniform and impersonate a soldier?
      They usually don't have the ID to go with it and aren't invited to attend by the legislators for an award
      I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by Forever_frost View Post
        They usually don't have the ID to go with it and aren't invited to attend by the legislators for an award
        I only read what you copy'd and pasted, but I didn't see any mention of that.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by Craizie View Post
          I only read what you copy'd and pasted, but I didn't see any mention of that.
          "Kemnitz was visiting the building to be honored as his legislative district’s veteran of the year"
          I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool

          Comment


          • #6
            Maybe I skimmed over that part.

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by Craizie View Post
              Can't anyone get a uniform and impersonate a soldier?
              Originally posted by Forever_frost View Post
              They usually don't have the ID to go with it and aren't invited to attend by the legislators for an award
              but lets be honest frost...you can go on uscavalry and order pretty much whatever you want.
              hell, because our uniform shop on base sucks so bad i have to order the majority of my uniform components online.

              I understand the tsa has a job to do, but sound judgement and common sense seem to be in a severe short supply with those guys (gender neutral statement)
              2011 Mustang GT
              sigpic

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              • #8
                The TSA are a bunch of mouth breathing idiots. With that being said the guy deserves no special treatment when it comes to security.

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                • #9
                  At least they're profiling everyone.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    QUOTE=Forever_frost;1101772]Wearing the uniform of the Few and Proud doesn’t rate preferential treatment from the Transportation Security Administration or California capitol security officers, retired Marine Cpl. Nathan Kemnitz recently found.[/quote]

                    Duh. Fuck anyone for expecting special treatment like we have some fucking class system. This isn't Japan where samurai walk the street and people bow and scrape as they pass.

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                    • #11
                      The man was INVITED there. His name had to have been on a list of guests for the day, he would have had ID and the whole 9 yards. It's pretty easy to tell a service member from just about anyone else. Especially when they're INVITED to come to be given an award.
                      I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by KungFuHamster View Post
                        but lets be honest frost...you can go on uscavalry and order pretty much whatever you want.
                        hell, because our uniform shop on base sucks so bad i have to order the majority of my uniform components online.

                        I understand the tsa has a job to do, but sound judgement and common sense seem to be in a severe short supply with those guys (gender neutral statement)
                        Oh I ordered most of my stuff from there or Ranger Joes. When you're given an invite to appear to receive an award, the security guys are given notice or were last time I was given one.
                        I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Forever_frost View Post
                          The man was INVITED there. His name had to have been on a list of guests for the day, he would have had ID and the whole 9 yards. It's pretty easy to tell a service member from just about anyone else. Especially when they're INVITED to come to be given an award.
                          We're you not checked for weapons when you met Obama?

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Frost, security checkpoints are for everyone. You act like no military person has ever gone crazy and started shooting or maiming people.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Forever_frost View Post
                              The man was INVITED there. His name had to have been on a list of guests for the day, he would have had ID and the whole 9 yards. It's pretty easy to tell a service member from just about anyone else. Especially when they're INVITED to come to be given an award.

                              How the hell would the dumbshit TSA agents know that? Come on dude. I'm first in line on the fuck the TSA bandwagon, but you aren't being reasonable with this one. That article is also horribly written, it sounds like he had more problems with some security guard than the TSA. I think several of you are arguing differing parts of what happened. It would be great if we could get some reporters that could write something coherently. I was reading an article on Yahoo! this morning where the guy actually wrote "all of the sudden." First time I have ever commented on a news article.

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