Ticket inspections, passport control and further checks at the gate are just three of the barriers that illegitimate plane passengers have to evade, yet some are still managing it. A man boarded a Heathrow flight to Norway without a ticket, boarding pass or passport, in one of the latest cases of sky-high stowaways.
What happened? The unnamed passenger slipped onto a British Airways flight to Oslo on Dec. 13. Having “tailgated his way through the automatic gates at Terminal 3,” said The Telegraph, he passed through “full security screening” before reaching the gate. There, he pretended to be travelling with a family and boarded the Airbus A320. Once on board, he kept moving seats as the plane filled up before the cabin crew realized he wasn’t a legitimate passenger and removed him.
How are they getting through? Stowaways often take advantage of “bottlenecks where passenger processing occurs,” Damian Devlin, an aviation management lecturer at the University of East London, said to The Telegraph. The situation “creates sufficient distraction,” with staff “so focused on a particular task and on maximizing passenger throughput” that they “fail to notice tailgating taking place.”
An American woman, Marilyn Hartman, was dubbed the Serial Stowaway after she allegedly boarded at least 20 commercial flights without a ticket, including a 2018 British Airways flight from Chicago to Heathrow. It was “crazy” that she was able to get onto flights by simply “following someone,” she said to CBS News in 2021.
Will breaches continue? We “don’t always know exactly how it happens,” because if a breach involves “lapses” at security checkpoints, the “relevant agencies” might not want to “broadcast their vulnerabilities,” said USA Today. But as technology is increasingly used in the airport security process, it will be “less likely” that “sneaking onto an aeroplane is possible,” said Thrillist.
Technology is “continuously improving and continuously making it more and more difficult for people who have ill intent to accomplish what they are trying to do, whether it’s X-ray machines, metal detection, liquid detection, all of the above,” said Rich Davis of security company International SOS. |