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  • Airport danger

    This is friggin scary!

    The Editor, Sir:
    This letter is to warn travellers boarding flights at the Sangster International Airport of the danger they put themselves in when they check in their luggage. On Thursday, March 4, my sister was returning to Canada and checked in at the counter handling CanJet Airlines bound for Pearson International Airport in Toronto, Canada.

    On arrival in Toronto, she went to collect her luggage and realised that her suitcase had a special mark, and was reluctant in taking it off the carousel. The suitcase went around twice. She said to herself that the suitcase looked like hers but she did not put any special mark on it.
    She voiced her concern aloud: "That suitcase looks like mine, but what the hell is that red tie doing on it!" Someone heard her and stepped over and asked her what she had said. She repeated and was told not to touch the suitcase. He took it off the carousel, got the dogs to sniff it. When the suitcase was opened, lo and behold, lying on top of her clothes were some packets of cocaine.

    Well, she was stripped-searched, arrested, fingerprinted, photographed and whatever else goes with the arrest of a potential drug trafficker. Can you imagine the shame and humiliation she suffered? She almost fainted when her suitcase was opened and there lying before her were packets of drugs.

    Humiliation
    The million-dollar question is: Who put the drugs in her suitcase? Why was hers chosen? What if she wasn't observant to see that the suitcase that looked like hers was carrying a special mark, and she had just yanked it off the carousel and marched with it to Customs? Today, she would be in jail. Despite the shame and humiliation she went through she was not cast into jail, as the arresting and investigating officers accepted that she was ignorant of the drug in her suitcase. She is emotionally drained. She is having constant flashbacks of her ordeal. She is becoming a nervous wreck. Her crying from the moment she was arrested has not ceased. Her ordeal has affected the entire family here and abroad.

    As travellers, we need to request supporting documents when our luggage is checked off to show that luggage is free from illegal substance. Why is there a rule that suitcases are not to be padlocked?

    I trust that this letter will cause travellers to be very careful, as criminal activities abound everywhere.

    I am, etc.,
    UPSET FAMILY MEMBER
    Montego Bay, St James
    Life is a system of half-truths and lies, opportunistic, convenient evasion.”
    - Langston Hughes

  • #2
    There is enough precedence for me to believe what happened to this person could be true, I know of at least TWO former airline workers who were sent to prison after they were found guilty of tampering with people's luggage by putting drugs in it.

    That raises the question of others who were sent to jail and lost a lot after drugs were put in their luggage by greedy and unscrupulous people.
    Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
    Che Guevara.

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    • #3
      ...so lets take this to it's conclusion.

      Lets say the individual collected his/her luggage; and that (innocent) person cleared customs. My question is: is there someone (who knows about the scheme) waiting to approach the owner of the luggage and..............>>>what?
      The only time TRUTH will hurt you...is if you ignore it long enough

      HL

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      • #4
        Me thinks someone was supposed to grab the luggage from the conveyor b4 the owner got to it.

        My daughter checked in her luggage at MoBay a few years ago. Only to be walking to the gate and saw her luggage sitting in the middle of the floor somewhere. She wouldn't touch it, so she called security and the Policeman was telling her to look to see if it was tampered with. Well she told him that she wouldn't know what to look for and insisted that he inspect it. Which he did.

        They will have to break the code and the lock - but ain't leaving my suitcase open.
        Life is a system of half-truths and lies, opportunistic, convenient evasion.”
        - Langston Hughes

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