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-Lurid Crime Tales-
Michael Yon arrested at Seattle airport
2010-01-06
Thank goodness our Homeland Security people are on the job after the EunuchBomber botched attack on Christmas Day. We certainly don't want to have independent war correspondents passing through our airports without revealing their annual income:

Got arrested at the Seattle airport for refusing to say how much money I make. (The uniformed ones say I was not “arrested', but they definitely handcuffed me.) Their videos and audios should show that I was polite, but simply refused questions that had nothing to do with national security. Port authority police eventually came — they were professionals — and rescued me from the border bullies.

When they handcuffed me, I said that no country has ever treated me so badly. Not China. Not Vietnam. Not Afghanistan. Definitely not Singapore or India or Nepal or Germany, not Brunei, not Indonesia, or Malaysia, or Kuwait or Qatar or United Arab Emirates. No county has treated me with the disrespect can that can be expected from our border bullies.
Posted by: Anonymoose

#20  CS, the proper answer to how much money you make is "nunya."

As in "nunya goddam business."
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2010-01-06 23:32  

#19  Interesting. In the comment thread at Blackfive, there's a poster from Homeland Security (Blackfive backtracked the IP address). He claims -- and this does make sense -- that they have responsibilities to catch drug smugglers and everything else, not just jihadi terrorists, and also that Mr. Yon has a bit of a history when he returns from abroad. Scroll down to the bottom, then clink on the Comment link thingy. I'd send you directly there, but I don't know how to do that yet. Sorry.
Posted by: trailing wife   2010-01-06 22:09  

#18  Yon: " People are asking if I plan to file a lawsuit against the Federal Government. The answer has been "no" up until recently, when what appears to be a DHS employee made false statements about me on Blackfive. Now it's getting serious. The Feds should release their tapes of my arrest."

and
Am going to ask my attorney to examine a lawsuit for libel against the Federal government for the post on Blackfive.

Posted by: 3dc   2010-01-06 19:56  

#17  Yon is reporting on facebook that gov folks are trashing him on blackfive and other sites over this. He is talking with his legal staff about suing the Fed Gov for LIBEL!
Posted by: 3dc   2010-01-06 19:54  

#16  And keep in mind, DeMint is fighting to keep the TSA from going Union.

I think I remember that that was a big debate when TSA was getting organized.

National Treasury Employees Union (NTEU) includes Customs and Border Protection.
Posted by: Sherry   2010-01-06 15:48  

#15   Keeping the nation safe from Joan Rivers aka Joan Rosenberg: The 76-year-old comedienne says she was set to get on a flight [from Costa Rica] to Newark Liberty International Airport -- the last flight out that night -- when she was bumped by a gate agent who found her married and professional names on her boarding pass "fishy."

"At the last minute," Rivers said on CNN's "Larry King Live," "some moron, idiot decided, as we were literally going to the plane and ripping your ticket, that they didn't understand why my passport had two names on it. And I was denied access to the plane." [Dave Letterman quipped] "We got Joan Rivers, and we still can't get Osama Bin Laden!"

Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2010-01-06 13:09  

#14   The Customs People (if that's who put the cuffs on Yon) can ask any question they want & can do pretty much anything they wish to someone who falls into their clutches. This has always been the case, even prior to 9/11. Yon's problem was merely insubordination.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2010-01-06 13:01  

#13  Michael should have answered them in Tagalog.
Posted by: GolfBravoUSMC   2010-01-06 12:13  

#12  Michael Yon: "There is some confusion about who arrested me. TSA was not involved. The Customs people (CBP) were the actors who handcuffed me."
Posted by: Deacon Blues   2010-01-06 11:47  

#11  While I clearly understand the technique of unexpected questions used to gauge the subjects response, neither the TSA nor any other agency has unlimited right to my privacy information. A reasonable response, delivered politely, that it really isn't their business, should lead perhaps to additional questions, but shouldn't be accepted as an immediate sign of uncooperative behavior. Somewhere in this I think you will find ego-driven adolescent behavior on the part of TSA, and principled resistence by Mr. Yon.
Posted by: NoMoreBS   2010-01-06 11:47  

#10  Every time I see them pull an oldster, child, or family out of line for additional screening, I feel a lttle LESS safe. I also want to scream "OH COME ON!" but I know that I will be put on a No-Fly list with Joan Rivers.
Posted by: Cyber Sarge    2010-01-06 11:28  

#9  Asking “uncomfortable” and seemingly irrelevant questions is a common interrogation method for gauging aggression. Often the answer to the question is not as important as the response. Any reasonble figure would be an acceptable answer to that question becuase TSA has no way to verify his income.
Posted by: DepotGuy   2010-01-06 10:26  

#8  Mr. Yon has made a statement that it wasn't the TSA, but the Border Bullies (his term).
Posted by: Deacon Blues   2010-01-06 09:46  

#7  The TSA has not turned into anything. It has been this since day 1.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2010-01-06 09:28  

#6  CS, I'm afraid "Way more than you do." would have gotten Mr. Yon a beating as well for "resisting arrest" or some other handy police euphemism.

As far as I can tell the TSA has turned into a bureaucratic police organization not answerable to anyone. Just one more step down the road to a police state.
Posted by: AlanC   2010-01-06 09:08  

#5  My boss who retired a few years ago and his wife were really hasseled recently. She is in the early stages of Alzheimer's and couldn't remember where she was going when asked. Even with her prescriptions and the doctor's notes they still kept them for several hours. These people are in their early 70's. Real threats. TSA is a very bad joke.
Posted by: Deacon Blues   2010-01-06 09:08  

#4  We need to see more of this and I am not kidding. All the stupid rules have yet to pass one security test and only inconvience us. I mean come on which of you is going to surrender an aircraft to a person with nail clippers (even toenail ones)? Mike should have answered "Way more that you do."

Mike I support your refusal, but the simple answer would be "Way more than you do."
Posted by: Cyber Sarge   2010-01-06 08:53  

#3  The question was not ridiculous: with his travel history he should reasonably be expected to explain how & why he has it and how he pays for it. He should not have to answer specifically (Just "Not nearly enough; I am a self-employed war correspondent, here is a link to my website/work etc.") It is wrong for TSA to act the way they often do, whether to Mr. Yon or the eunuchbomber.
Posted by: Glenmore   2010-01-06 08:17  

#2  Yon is a very experienced traveller and a careful observer / reporter. Not likely he made a mistake, especially considering they also asked him for whom he works.
Posted by: lotp   2010-01-06 07:30  

#1  refusing to say how much money I make

Strange question to ask. Is he sure he wasn't asked how much he was bringing in (to the country) rather than how much he earned? Could be a misunderstanding of the question.
Posted by: Solomon Glulet1502   2010-01-06 07:17  

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