Never underestimate the stupidity of people with authority.
Best perk of being Federal L/E… can fly armed for personal travel.
I know there are some good people working in TSA… but they aren't the majority. A lot get out and move to my agency (CBP). But flying prior to work, I hated dealing with TSA. I'm a Type 1 diabetic on an insulin pump. Pump and sensors cannot go thru X-Ray… to include body scanner. I've had TSA actually argue with me about going into the body scanner. I said no, pat me down, swab my hands, and get me thru your checkpoint!
When they keep saying, "it's safe," I ask them if they are going to front $6,000 if that scanner fries a medical device that is ultimately keeping me alive? No… do you have professional liability insurance? "What's that?" It's the protection you are going to need after I sue TSA and they side that you didn't follow their protocols… and it turns out that the lawsuit gets directed towards you.
I've had other officers argue with me about flying armed… that headache is why I always do. I've checked bags with handguns before… being I'm only allowed to carry my duty gun. Boxes that TSA or anyone else can't get into… big thing because I wouldn't trust TSA with safety scissors.
When I was down at FLETC, they trained at the same location. I was there for like four months… they are there for two weeks. Formation to move from class to the cafeteria… it's a joke (blob more than a formation). I really try not to judge people, but if they require a background investigation… I'm shocked many passed from what I observed. And for an agency that has to deal with lines constantly… they always would cut the lines and act stupid because they have to eat before other trainees who were actually doing real PT either before or after lunch.
Best story I got related to flying with a gun… was from a coworker. So, he picked up one of those gun cases that looked like a guitar case. Legitimate gun case. He was bringing his AR back home to go shooting with friends. Declares it, goes thru security… and then sees local PD in the terminal. They announce his name… "hey, what's up?" Sir, what's in your luggage? "My AR?" Did you declare it? "Yep, told the ticket agent… and I asked if I needed to do anything else, which she said no." You have ID? "You want to see my credentials?" [emoji1787]
Turned out the lady didn't do the right thing, and they tried to say that the case wasn't a gun case. He pulled it up on his phone, showing it was, and that it was secured correctly. PD left… our management made him write a memo because TSA made a stink… but it went no where.
Like two months after this happened… I flew out of a different airport; maybe like 2.5 hours away from the one he was at. Flew armed, so had to deal with a TSA supervisor, who was making small talk as everything was checked. Asked where I worked… "did you fly out of X with a long gun?" [emoji1787] Tell him no, but I know the guy. Asked why he brought that up… as I'm walking thru the terminal to meet up with my girlfriend/her daughter, who was going thru the checkpoint. He said that they had like four musters over it, and it turned into a big deal. Asked about the case, where some girl injected that he was wrong for using a guitar case. Explain that it was a legitimate gun case, and per their regulations, he was good to go. "Well, it looks like a guitar… so people aren't going to treat it the same as a firearm case." I looked at her, and without hesitation… "are you kidding me?" I cleaned that up A LOT. The airline is supposed to take the case to TSA, X-Ray to confirm it is ok, then directly take it to the cargo dock, and hand it directly to the cargo crew who will put it on the plane in their presence. Shy of that, it's done/over with. Who cares if someone thinks it is a guitar or not? She realized she wasn't going to win this argument… so she went to help another person just to get out of it.
Came back, told my buddy about it… and we laughed for about 30 minutes.