Comedians Sue Atlanta Police for Racial Profiling Over Airport Searches
The lawsuit contends that after passengers are screened at federally mandated security checkpoints, Clayton County police search them again before they can board their flight.

This week, two comedians filed a federal lawsuit against an Atlanta-area police department, alleging racial profiling at the city's airport.
Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport is the busiest in the world, seeing over 75 million passengers in 2021, and it's Georgia's largest employer. It is located within the jurisdiction of the Clayton County Police Department (CCPD). According to the lawsuit, CCPD officers routinely conduct searches on passengers as they attempt to board their flights. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution refers to the process as part of the CCPD's "jet bridge interdiction program."
In April 2021, Eric André, an actor and host of Adult Swim's The Eric Andre Show, tweeted that he was "racially profiled by two plain clothes Atlanta PD police" in the Delta Airlines terminal. "They stopped me on the way down the bridge to the plane for a 'random' search and asked [if] they could search me for drugs. I told them no." He referred to the incident as "Jim Crow racism." A CCPD spokesperson later referred to the encounter as "consensual." After André's tweets went viral, Clayton English, an actor and stand-up comedian, reached out about a similar incident that happened to him in October 2020.
In a press conference announcing the lawsuit, both André and English disputed the term "consensual." English said he felt "completely powerless" and compelled to comply. André stipulated that "When two cops stop you, you don't feel like you have the right to leave, especially when they start interrogating you about drugs."
André said the officers "singled [him] out" and approached him "ambush-style," asking "if I was selling drugs, transporting drugs, what kind of drugs I have on me." He called the situation "humiliating and dehumanizing" with other passengers "gawking at me like I was a perpetrator."
The lawsuit claims that the jet bridge program disproportionately targets passengers of color. Between September 2020 and April 2021, roughly the period between English's and André's encounters, CCPD stopped 402 passengers. Of the 378 for whom officers recorded the passenger's race, 68 percent were nonwhite and 56 percent were black.
Unfortunately, random unwarranted searches have become standard fare for travelers. The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) was created after 9/11 to make air travel more secure. But in practice, its purview expanded to include buses, trains, and even this year's Super Bowl, and it conducts thousands of random searches per year.
CCPD's program exists in addition to TSA checks, searching passengers who have already been screened at federally mandated security checkpoints. The lawsuit claims that the program is also remarkably unsuccessful: In over 400 stops, police only found drugs on three occasions.
In that same period of time, though, CCPD seized over $1 million in cash from 25 passengers. Despite there being no law against traveling with large sums of cash, police routinely take its presence as evidence of suspicious activity. Last year in Dallas, for example, police seized over $100,000 from a passenger on the basis that she reacted suspiciously when they asked her about it.
In Georgia, prosecutors need only prove by the preponderance of the evidence that cash was involved in criminal activity in order to justify the seizure of property, whereas owners must prove their innocence to get it back. Law enforcement, meanwhile, gets to keep up to 100 percent of the proceeds from whatever it seizes.
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On the plus side, this adds more airport jokes for the comedians to use in their routines.
"You know what I hate about flying? The airline food. Also the stealing of money from passengers. That's bad too."
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" . . . and it conducts thousands of random searches per year."
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects,[a] against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.[
See, right there in the constitution - "or randomly just for the hell of it".
There are exceptions to all of the amendments in Bill of Rights. They were written in invisible ink that can only be read by wise wizards of the Ivy League. They put on black robes are are then able to divine things we mere mortals cannot possibly see or comprehend. Like the travel, terrorism, and drug exceptions to the 4A. It's all right there. But we can't see it because we didn't go to Harvard and don't have black robes.
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Ah, but somehow at airports, there's no expectation of privacy - and I have encountered few textualists or originalists who seem perturbed by the government's airport searches being justified on these grounds.
Why are they complaining. the cops just want to stop mass shootings in public schools? /sarc
I'm shocked Eric Andre didn't have drugs on him.
That was also a thought. It might have just been individual profiling in this case.
be more famous.
This lawsuit means they're working on it.
Maybe the article could have covered why the CCPD has any authority inside the airport secure area to conduct searches. The lawsuit will get nowhere on racial profiling grounds, but has a better chance on the "why the fuck does the CCPD have any authority" grounds.
The airport "secure area" is still state property. Despite the imposition of TSA, airports were not turned into federal territory. That means that even though there are a bunch of TSA thugs groping groins and asserting their petty authority, they can't arrest a thief who steals from the candy machine or vandalizes a bathroom. Local cops still have exclusive jurisdiction over those crimes.
Oh, so you don't want to answer any questions? It would be a real shame if we were to detain you until after your flight left.
"Of the 378 for whom officers recorded the passenger's race, 68 percent were nonwhite and 56 percent were black."
And the percentage of nonwhite v. white travelers was.... ?
CB
Shush.
Let alone the ratio in the Atlanta metropolitan area.
Obviously wildly different. That doesn't even need a cite, it's obviously, obviously, obviously true. Only a completely loony racist could deny it - because non-loony racists know that denying obvious facts just loses them whatever credibility they might otherwise have had.
Atlanta has roughly half the proportion of black people as the proportion of black people stopped at the airport - and it's well-established that black people are much less likely to fly.
You're a moron as well as a racist shithead.
Nine eleven is still a national emergency ... twenty-one years later. But I don't blame the power-hungry Rambo-wannabes ... I blame the craven citizens who keep voting for politicians who promise to protect them from the monsters under their beds.
Emergencies never end. Not as long as they provide somebody power and an income.
That's how the ratchet clicks.
Don't forget bait-and-switch too. TSA was set up with a promise to only make flights safe from the legion of bin Ladens who were about to take over the country, but morphed in about 5 minutes to a generally warranted search based on your presence in the airport. Searching for anything other than weapons was no supposed to be part of it.
Gee.... what went wrong? Maybe the right people weren't in charge?
The lawsuit claims that the jet bridge program disproportionately targets passengers of color.
So apparently if the government is going to violate people's rights its agents should use the national census to pick their victims? Despite all evidence to the contrary, public resources are finite and probably not best spent accosting little old ladies. Willie Sutton had it right, even if the TSA should be disappear into the dung heap of awful laws.
If you're going to argue for profiling, at least argue for effective profiling. Profiling by race (alone) is astonishingly ineffective.
Constitution free zone! It's within a hundred miles of a place where people could theoretically enter the country, ergo it's basically the same as an Taliban terrorist bunker as far as the 4th amendment is concerned.
Be in an airport like a punk. Get busted like a punk.
In the AP article, the police department claims that the encounters were 'consensual' and the searches were 'voluntary'.
"The police department calls the stops “consensual encounters” and says they are “random,”"
"Officers blocked them as they entered the jet bridge and asked if they were carrying illegal drugs, the lawsuit says. Both were asked to hand over their boarding passes and identification."
"“Mr. Andre chose to speak with investigators during the initial encounter,” the department said in a statement posted on Facebook. “During the encounter, Mr. Andre voluntarily provided the investigators information as to his travel plans. Mr. Andre also voluntarily consented to a search of his luggage"
Both were asked to hand over their boarding passes and identification.
See the problem? You are required to show ID throughout the airport for privilege of using it and can be removed for refusing. Once you hand them your ID and boarding pass, they will just hold onto it while they ask questions and you don't have the required documentation to board the plane. It is an unescapable trap unless you are willing to forego travel.
I would sue the airline and airport for contractual interference in allowing local police access to the jetway. They have a contractual obligation to allow you access to the plane and you have already fulfilled your obligation to allow screening by the TSA. There is absolutely no need for the carrier or the property manager to allow local police access for additional screening.
What are the airlines getting from allowing the practice? Are they using the screenings to potentially remove overbooked passengers?
What are the airlines getting from allowing the practice?
They are being graciously allowed to sell their services at the times, places, and in the manner which is amenable to Uncle Sam. Perhaps you don't remember the days before 9/11 when you could walk right up to the jet bridge before a lady to collect your ticket was the only thing to stand between you and flying anywhere in the world.
I don't have sympathy for the airlines. They showed their cards with the way they allowed passengers to be treated during the Terror des Masques.
Forcing masks on toddlers so that they scream and spit everywhere instead of allowing them to sit quietly and keep their excretions to themselves was a pinnacle of human stupidity.
sit quietly and keep their excretions to themselves
Best imagery I've read in days. And pretty much the only criteria I have for someone being an "OK kid".
The problem is, those of us who remember (less un) civilized travel are starting to die off, leaving just the pantswetting snowflakes who think mommy and daddy will always be there to take care of them.
Given that they consider the IRS voluntary collection, I see how this tracks. That said, by their definition there is no rape since the victim eventually consents by not fighting more or fearing other consequences more.
Also this little nugget from the AP article linked:
"Eight of the 25 challenged the seizures, and Clayton County police settled each case, returning much of the seized money, the lawsuit says."
Only 32% of the people who had money seized, challenged, but 100% of them won. What does that tell you?
Also, apparently 'winning' does not get you all of your money back, interestingly.
That Asset Forfeiture is a scourge. One of the things that pisses me off the most.
It tells you it’s worth it. The resources used (time, effort, money) to troll for this money are not their own (public, taxpayers), they’re on the clock anyway, they might as well give it a go and see what they get to keep.
Profiling is exactly what airport security agents SHOULD be doing, instead of randomly hassling people who show no signs of being a problem. It works well in Israel, where airport inspectors receive extensive training in profiling.
Do the Israelis steal passengers’ money?
I suspect not, because if they did it would be all over the news as another example of Israeli badness.
Not that I'm aware of.
Yes – if the profiling is based on actual analysis. Do you think that such analysis is actually performed? Or are cops allowed to play hunches, like, travelling while black is suspicious?
Look up the word "should".
Of the 402 stops, only 3 yielded drug seizures. Seized were 26 grams of “suspected THC gummies”, 10 grams of unspecified drugs, and six prescription pills obtained without a prescription. Only the latter two seizures led to criminal charges. Does that seem like law enforcement trying really hard to find something to do to justify their existence? The gummies were certainly confiscated from a tourist and in my experience and the experience of others who travel with edibles, the TSA is not looking for them, so why is the Clayton County police bothering with it?
The TSA is a jobs program for Black women. Like public education.
Your comment isn't helpful.
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Unfortunately, random unwarranted searches have become standard fare for travelers.
Serious question: How about requiring the searchers to publish their randomization algorithm for disinterested validation? Something like, perhaps, "We search the n-th person to walk by that trashcan, and we alternate n between 400 and 600 at the top of each hour."
Airport cops, the thin blue line between freedom and 9/11. How could people with such a prestigious and important job possibly be racists?
These aren't airport cops, they're the county mounties.
County is using the airport for asset forfeiture schemes. At least with TSA your tax dollars are paying for my foot massages.
I'm not convinced that cops necessarily discriminate against Blacks. In my town, the police recently gunned down a 75 year old grandmother with dementia in her own kitchen, but since she was Latina and not Back, no one cared. The point is, cops hate everyone, not just Blacks.