The crouching, camouflaged figure is most certainly armed. But few would say he was dangerous.
Security officials disagreed however when he passed through a scanner at Gatwick Airport.
His three-inch, plastic toy gun was branded a ‘firearm’ and banned from a transatlantic flight.
![]()
Click to view image: '37ac9ed62acc-article00ceefe8d000005dc94_468x632.jpg'
Banned: A couple were not allowed to take this model soldier and its gun on board a plane at Gatwick Airport
![]()
Click to view image: 'acd5f3ec1207-article00cef4821000005dc505_468x292.jpg'
Tiny: The resin model rifle had to be sent to Canada by post
![]()
Click to view image: 'bad3400e3d18-article13510370cf08f40000005dc957_233x266.jpg'
Terror alert: Julie Lloyd had to post the 'firearm' to the UK as she was banned from taking it on a flight.
The plastic Royal Signaller was bought by tourist Julie Lloyd as a present to take home to her husband Ken, a recently retired policeman in Toronto, Canada.
Mrs Lloyd, 59, who regularly visits Britain to see her mother, said: ‘I took it to the airport still in its wrapping, but they discovered the little gun when it was scanned.
‘It is only about three inches long and there are no moving parts. There isn’t even a trigger.
‘But they wouldn’t let me take it with me. I had it in my hand luggage. I just didn’t think it would cause a problem. They said rules were rules. There was no flexibility or common sense.’
Mrs Lloyd, who emigrated with her husband in 1993, was forced to retreat from security to buy a padded envelope to post the offending rifle home instead.
‘I posted it to myself from the airport and it arrived a few days after I got home,’ she added.
She had bought the figure on a visit to the Royal Signals Museum, in Blandford, Dorset.
Museum spokesman Adam Forty said: ‘This is a military museum and takes security very seriously, especially around military installations and airports, but this does seem more than a little excessive. The “firearm” is three inches long and cast out of resin.
‘It’s probably just as well we didn’t sell her a toy tank’, Forty said.
Mr Lloyd, 60, who was a member of the Territorial Army in Britain, said: ‘Julie had been to the museum to buy me something on my retirement.
‘But when she got to the airport she was faced with a system that had been created by bureaucrats.’
A spokesman at Gatwick said bosses would investigate the incident.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1351037/Airport-bans-toy-soldiers-inch-rifle-plane--safety-threat.html#ixzz1CJGYNvTm
By: marinemom
In: News
Tags: airport security, toy, toy soldier, absurdity
Marked as: approved
Views: 6547 | Comments: 16 | Votes: 0 | Favorites: 0 | Shared: 0 | Updates: 0 | Times used in channels: 1
Advertisement below
|
|
| Liveleak on Facebook | |
|
LIKE Liveleak.com |
-
Wash. Post tears into Israeli airport security checks that profile Arabs
-
Japanese Airport Security Supervised By An Old Sex Maniac
-
Airport Security: Woman made to Strip
-
U.S. Airport Security Problems?
-
Japanese Airport Security
-
Hidden Bomb Gets Past Airport Security.
-
Veiled Women Pass Through Airport Security; Investigation Launched by Canadian Gov’t
-
U.S. airport security under fire
-
Chopper Reid Parody - Airport security
-
Fed Up With Airport Security
-
Airport security



