- Security breach at Boise airport caused by man seeking shoe shine
Transportation Safety Administration officials at the Boise Airport had to re-screen about 400 passengers about 1 p.m. Friday after a man seeking a shoe shine entered the secure area through the exit corridor. TSA officials said the man could not immediately be located in the terminal after he bypassed security. Before they learned who the man was, officials emptied the terminal and re-screened all passengers for the safety of the building, passengers and airplanes. Officials did not say how they discovered the man made it through undetected. It is unclear whether any flights were delayed as a result, but officials said four flights were "affected." Nico Melendez, a Los Angeles TSA spokesman, said a man who recently left the secure area of the terminal went in through the exit corridor to get his shoes shined, bypassing security.
"He's talking to police now," Melendez said.
Now that our tax dollars at work don't you feel safer just know this
If Bill and Hillary ever split I think this is a good one for her next hubby
MADRID (Reuters) -
A Spanish driver who collided with a cyclist is suing the dead youth's family $29,300 for the damage the impact of his body did to his luxury car, a Spanish newspaper reported on Friday. Businessman Tomas Delgado says 17-year-old Enaitz Iriondo caused $20,500 of damage to his Audi A8 in the fatal 2004 crash in La Rioja region, the El Pais newspaper reported.Delgado, who has faced no criminal charges for the incident, wants a further 6,000 euros to cover the cost of hiring another vehicle while his car was being repaired, El Pais said.The youth had been cycling alone at night without reflective clothing or a helmet, according to a police report cited by El Pais.His family won 33,000 euros compensation from Delgado's insurance company after the firm acknowledged he had been driving at excessive speed and this could have contributed to the incident, El Pais reported."I'm also a victim in all of this, you can't fix the lad's problems, but you can fix mine," Delgado told the newspaper, ahead of a January 30 legal decision on his suit.The family said they had previously pitied Delgado for the guilt he must feel at killing their son but were now disgusted that his greatest concern appeared to be money."This was the final straw, a kick in the teeth," the youth's mother Rosa Trinidad told El Pais