(Courtesy of Wired: "TSA Special Agent John Enright, left, speaks to Steven Frischling outside the blogger's home in Niantic, Connecticut, after returning Frischling's laptop Wednesday." Photo: Thomas Cain/Wired.com)
On Saturday morning, following the incident in which a Nigerian man attempted to blow up a US-bound flight, the TSA issued an urgent security directive to thousands of contacts around the world—airlines, airports, and so on. On Tuesday, Special agents from the TSA's Office of Inspection showed up at the homes of Steven Frischling and Christopher Elliott, two bloggers who appear to have been the first to publish a copy of that document online, and interrogated each on where they obtained the document. Both bloggers received civil subpoenas from the TSA agents.
Snip from Wired piece by Kim Zetter:
The document, which the two bloggers published within minutes of each other Dec. 27, was sent by TSA to airlines and airports around the world and described temporary new requirements for screening passengers through Dec. 30, including conducting "pat-downs" of legs and torsos. The document, which was not classified, was posted by numerous bloggers. Information from it was also published on some airline websites.Here is Elliot's post about his visit from a friendly TSA Special Agent named Flaherty. "[T]he TSA wants me to tell them who gave me the security directive. I told Flaherty I'd call my attorney and get back to him. What would you do?""They're saying it's a security document but it was sent to every airport and airline," says Steven Frischling, one of the bloggers. "It was sent to Islamabad, to Riyadh and to Nigeria. So they're looking for information about a security document sent to 10,000-plus people internationally. You can't have a right to expect privacy after that."
Here's Frischling's post. He says, "I wish I had a long intertwined story about how I got the document, but I don't. I received it, I read it, I posted it. Why did I post it? Because following the failed terrorist attack on the 25th of December there was a lot of confusion and speculation surrounding changes in airline & airport security procedures."
Here at Boing Boing, I linked to Frischling's leak post after I got home from an international flight into the US on which I personally experienced the procedures detailed in the leaked directive. I also tweeted what I experienced of those procedures before, during, and after the flight. Thorough physical patdowns and secondary hand luggage screening pre-board, no leaving your seat or electronics or putting anything on your lap during the final hour of flight, and so on. Attendants on my flight explained that the stepped-up procedures came from a just-issued TSA security directive. As soon as airlines and airports began implementing the directivemdash;and that began before the bloggers posted their copies—the contents of the directive were no hardly secret. So why the strong-arm tactics?
Read more: New York Times story, Wired News story.

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