Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers intercepted two firearms at the Richmond International Airport checkpoints this past weekend, bringing the total number caught at Richmond so far this year to 18, which exceeds the number caught during all of 2024 at the airport.
“It is disappointing to continue to see travelers bringing their firearms to our checkpoints instead of properly packing them for a flight,” said Robin “Chuck” Burke, TSA’s federal security director for the airport. “Bringing a gun to a checkpoint is careless and puts everyone at risk for a possible accident. We have ways for travelers to properly transport a firearm for a flight. All we ask is that they be packed in the safest manner possible. That means firearms should be unloaded and locked in a hard-sided case. That case then needs to be taken to the airline check-in counter where the traveler needs to declare that they want to fly with it. The airline will make sure it is safely transported in the belly of the aircraft where nobody has access to it during a flight.”
On Saturday, June 8, TSA officers stopped a Florida man with a 9 mm handgun loaded with 10 bullets. On Sunday, June 9, TSA officers detected a 9mm firearm along with 16 accessible bullets in two gun magazines belonging to a Rockville, Va., man. Both individuals were cited by police, who confiscated the weapons. Police confiscate firearms, not TSA officials. In addition, the men each face a stiff financial civil penalty for bringing a gun to a TSA security checkpoint. The penalty for carrying weapons can reach as high as $15,000, depending on the circumstances.
“It’s still early June and we have another 6 ½ months to go in the year and already we have surpassed the firearm count from 2023. There’s just no excuse for bringing a gun to a checkpoint,” Burke said. “Our officers are good at their jobs and they remain vigilant in their mission.”