We’ve all seen something like this in an airport or somewhere else in public. An excited child sees a grandmother and impulsively runs over to hug her. It’s sweet and loving and it makes most of us happy.
For the thuggish bureaucrats of the TSA in Wichita, Kansas, though, it was enough to make a soon-to-be-crying 4-year-old girl into a “suspect,” according to a mother who told her daughter’s story in a poignant and scary Facebook post.
Michelle Brademeyer was traveling with her two children — ages 4 and 6 — from Montana to Kansas for a wedding. Brademeyer’s mother (the children’s grandmother) was on the trip. The kids don’t get to see their grandmother that often, because she lives in California. This was their first time to travel together.
As the family was waiting to leave Wichita on the way back home, they went through security. Brademeyer and the children went through the scanners without problem, but something on the older woman was triggering the scanner, so she was told to sit to the side to wait for a pat-down search.
As the grandmother sat alone, Brademeyer’s 4-year-old daughter saw her sitting and ran over to give her a hug. (That’s her in the blue dress above.) It wasn’t more than a few seconds, but a TSA agent started screaming at the child. Agents wouldn’t allow the girl’s mother to come get her, because they said she must go through a pat-down now, too. They implied that the grandmother might have passed a gun to the now-crying 4-year-old.
When you can’t call one you love, silent phone just taunts your need
Cop pepper-spraying protesters is symbol for arrogant police culture
Correcting an old error: there’s no such thing as ‘We the People’
Love & Hope — Episode 1:
THE McELROY ZOO: Meet Lucy, the dog who used to live on a chain
Fiscal sanity is dead because most people are irrational hypocrites
If ‘bigots’ can lose their rights, will your rights be next to go?
Epiphany: My message changed when I selected a new audience
Step in the right direction: U.S. ad group bans cosmetic photoshopping