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TSA finds disassembled handgun parts in jars of peanut butter

TSA said the .22-caliber gun parts were wrapped in plastic and had been jammed into the middle of two plastic jars of peanut butter.
Credit: Transportation Security Administration
During a checked baggage screening, it was a sticky situation when an officer with Transportation Security Administration discovered two jars of peanut butter each containing parts of a disassembled handgun.

NEW YORK — During a checked baggage screening, it was a sticky situation when an officer with Transportation Security Administration discovered two jars of peanut butter each containing parts of a disassembled handgun.

This happened on Dec. 22 in a screening room at John F. Kennedy International Airport.

TSA said the .22-caliber gun parts were wrapped in plastic and had been jammed into the middle of two plastic jars of peanut butter. The gun’s magazine was loaded with bullets.

When the checked bag triggered an alarm in a Terminal 8 X-ray unit, a TSA officer opened the bag and upon closer inspection uncovered the concealed firearm parts.

TSA officials notified the Port Authority Police, who came to the checked baggage room in JFK’s Terminal 8, confiscated the items, tracked down the traveler in the terminal, and arrested him.

“The gun parts were artfully concealed in two smooth creamy jars of peanut butter, but there was certainly nothing smooth about the way the man went about trying to smuggle his gun,” said John Essig, TSA’s Federal Security Director for JFK Airport. “Our officers are good at their jobs and are focused on their mission—especially during the busy holiday travel period,” Essig said.

Travelers may transport their firearms for a flight if they have a proper permit and the gun is properly packed.

Firearms and firearm parts must be unloaded, packed in a locked hard-sided case and taken to the airline check-in counter to be declared.

At that point, the airline representative will make sure that the firearm is transported in the belly of the plane. Additionally, replica firearms are prohibited in carry-on baggage and must be transported in checked luggage.

The civil penalties for attempting to bring undeclared weapons onto a flight can stretch into thousands of dollars, depending on mitigating circumstances.

This individual now faces a stiff financial civil penalty — a penalty for carrying a weapon that was recently increased to a maximum of $15,000.

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