‘Cupcake of Mass Destruction’? TSA Confiscates Woman’s Frosted Cupcake

6
>>Follow Matzav On Whatsapp!<<

cupcake-frostingA Massachusetts woman who flew home from Las Vegas this PAST week says an airport security officer took her frosted cupcake because he thought its vanilla-bourbon icing could be a “security risk.”

Rebecca Hains told ABCNews.com today that a Transportation Security Administration agent at Las Vegas- McCarran International Airport confiscated her cupcake, saying the frosting sitting atop the red velvet cake was gel-like enough to violate regulations.

The incident took place Wednesday.

Hains, a teacher, said the cupcake was a gift from one of her students. She was traveling with her husband and toddler, and thought her young son might get hungry on the long trip home.

The cupcake was packaged in a glass container with a metal lid, which was why it attracted the attention of the scanner in the first place.

The TSA agent didn’t know what to do with the cupcake, so she called over her supervisor, Hains said.

“The TSA supervisor, Robert Epps, was using really bad logic – he said it counted as a gel-like substance because it was conforming to the shape of its container.”

“We also had a small pile of hummus sandwiches with creamy fillings, which made it through, but the cupcake with its frosting was apparently a terrorist threat…I just don’t know what world he was living in,” said Hains, speaking of the TSA officer.

Hains said she had flown from Boston to Las Vegas with two cupcakes without any problems.

“The TSA at Logan Airport said the cupcakes looked delicious and told us to have a great trip. But in Las Vegas, they were dangerous. They shouldn’t be delicious in one part of the country and a security threat in the other.”

Hains called the TSA “security theater.”

“You’d expect them to be consistent. If they’re doing what they claim to be doing and actually protecting travelers, they would be applying their rules using critical thinking. He gave no indication that really thought the cupcake was a threat.”

“This really isn’t about the cupcake, it’s about the bigger issue and it’s indicative of the fact that broader reforms need to be made to the TSA because they are not keeping us safe,” said Hains.

“In general, cakes and pies are allowed in carry-on luggage,” TSA spokesperson James Fotenos told ABC News affiliate WCVB. Fotenos added that they were looking into why this cupcake was confiscated.

{ABC News/Matzav.com Newscenter}


6 COMMENTS

  1. Maybe yes maybe not, as a ff I am happy to have the TSA doing what they do, they are human sometimes they mess up let’s hope they err on the sie of caution!!!!

  2. The questions the story rises are important. On the one hand strict one size fits all with no room for on the spot determinations will create uniformity but may not be responsive to situations as they happen that do not fit in the box leaving the public at risk.
    On the other hand with the rules so fluid the public has no idea how prepare for a flight and invites invites abuse from TSA personnel that may not be adequately trained or exercising a level of discretion beyond one’s pay grade.
    Certainly the TSA fulfills a critical role and as long as profiling is prohibited stories like this are just going to keep coming. There must be a better way

  3. They were probably hungry…
    Btw, something similar happened to me. On a flight leaving from JFK, the TSA confiscated my 1-lb. container of coleslaw because there was “too much liquid”.
    Chazeirim!

Leave a Reply to Agreer Cancel reply

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here