I have been flying with handguns in my luggage for the past 25 or 30 years.
The Federal Aviation Regulations (FAR 108.11) REQUIRE that the Red non-loaded Firearm affidavit that you sign in front of the ticket agent be INSIDE the case. I have never known it to be different.
ALWAYS check in with the ticket agent and request a Firearms Declaration Form. Offer to show the ticket agent that the firearm is unloaded, about half will turn you down.
My firearms are always in soft pouches inside of my hard sided lockable Samsonite suitcase. A hard sided suitcase Must Not use TSA locks. You are required to be in control of the Firearm throughout the Flight. A lock that TSA must get a key from you to open meets this requirement
Many Airports do not have a TSA area to send you off to. If this is the case, wait around the Security screening area and listen for your name to be paged. They will come and get the key from you. An agent is not supposed to open the case without a witness, usually a Supervisor. I usually head to the gate after 15 minutes of not hearing from them.
Once or twice since 9-11 I have had TSA agents try to tell me that the regulation meant a locked case inside a suitcase. I asked for them to pull out the regulation and show me where it said that.
I then pointed out that if their interpretation was correct, it would be pretty hard to take a hard sided rifle case and put it inside a suitcase. If we need to go beyond that, I ask for the Supervisor.
In easily over 100 flights I can not recall more than a few problems. The worst of which was the TSA staff at Boston's Logan airport. It took four agents and three supervisors looking through the pages of their "Guideline" book before they would admit there was no such requirement in those actual words.
If you are going through an Airport in a very Anti-Gun City or State, you might want to print out both the FARs involved and the Airlines policy from their website.
Advisory Circular 108-2
49 CFR 1540.111
Many TSA Agents will back down from arguing their beliefs if you have the printed FACTS with you
The Federal Aviation Regulations (FAR 108.11) REQUIRE that the Red non-loaded Firearm affidavit that you sign in front of the ticket agent be INSIDE the case. I have never known it to be different.
ALWAYS check in with the ticket agent and request a Firearms Declaration Form. Offer to show the ticket agent that the firearm is unloaded, about half will turn you down.
My firearms are always in soft pouches inside of my hard sided lockable Samsonite suitcase. A hard sided suitcase Must Not use TSA locks. You are required to be in control of the Firearm throughout the Flight. A lock that TSA must get a key from you to open meets this requirement
Many Airports do not have a TSA area to send you off to. If this is the case, wait around the Security screening area and listen for your name to be paged. They will come and get the key from you. An agent is not supposed to open the case without a witness, usually a Supervisor. I usually head to the gate after 15 minutes of not hearing from them.
Once or twice since 9-11 I have had TSA agents try to tell me that the regulation meant a locked case inside a suitcase. I asked for them to pull out the regulation and show me where it said that.
I then pointed out that if their interpretation was correct, it would be pretty hard to take a hard sided rifle case and put it inside a suitcase. If we need to go beyond that, I ask for the Supervisor.
In easily over 100 flights I can not recall more than a few problems. The worst of which was the TSA staff at Boston's Logan airport. It took four agents and three supervisors looking through the pages of their "Guideline" book before they would admit there was no such requirement in those actual words.
If you are going through an Airport in a very Anti-Gun City or State, you might want to print out both the FARs involved and the Airlines policy from their website.
Advisory Circular 108-2
49 CFR 1540.111
Many TSA Agents will back down from arguing their beliefs if you have the printed FACTS with you