Could leaving a TSA notice of baggage inspection visible in my suitcase upon opening help it avoid inspection?

6/18/2014 6:56:04 AM

If this worked, it’d be an ideal way for terrorists and smugglers to bypass security… It’d also mean that the TSA can magically look into your bag and read papers sitting inside them, at which point they’d no longer need to open them to know what’s inside them.

Ergo, logic concludes that it’s not going to work unless you’re up against an incredibly stupid TSA worker (and no doubt they exist).
In fact, given the extremely paranoid nature of the entire agency, I’d venture to guess that the presence of the notice on opening a bag would peek their interest for an extra thorough search and get you flagged for a grilling at the boarding gate.

1/12/2014 12:08:42 AM

Loss or damage comes in two kinds: deliberate (also known as theft) and accidental. I suspect the vast majority of accidental damage to the contents of a suitcase, or to a suitcase resulting in loss of contents, happens when the suitcase is not open. It’s dropped off a cart, or goes down a chute oddly. There’s only a tiny chance that a TSA agent legitimately searching your bag will bump something and break it, or take something out and forget to put it back. They are both trained and supervised not to do that. That leaves theft. Setting aside the issue of whether those who steal from your luggage are more likely to be TSA people or baggage handlers, do you think there’s any chance a thief would see that inspection slip and decide not to rifle through your bag looking for something to steal?

The slip may or may not save your bag from an inspection once it’s been pulled aside and opened. But I think it will have no effect at all on the chances of loss or damage, so if that’s actually what you’re worried about, you need another plan.

1/11/2014 5:06:32 PM

So I am reading a blog on a TSA site, which describes though not in great detail the standard operating procedure for the inspection of the bags including an automated system that triggers the bag inspection. So if the inspection is warranted a human being will pull your bag and do a manual inspection and finds the notice inside the bag.

Now here is where it would get rather interesting. Since this inspection usually only occurs once during your travels unless you have to pick up your luggage and re-check it in the thought process is potentially two fold:

  1. Check the tag on the bag so may be this one was inspected elsewhere.
  2. This guy is trying to beat the system since he just checked the bag in for the flight so he might have something to hide.

And given the beating TSA has received over placing the notices into bags that have not been screened I would assume that you’re going to be more likely to receive a body cavity search with placing a notice inside the bag rather then just leaving the bag as is.

P.S. Personally I would not buy anything particularly expensive to worry about it being damaged since it’s more likely to get damaged if it falls off a loader. Plus please review the questions on this site related to Luggage

Credit:stackoverflow.com

About me

Hello,My name is Aparna Patel,I’m a Travel Blogger and Photographer who travel the world full-time with my hubby.I like to share my travel experience.

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