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Subject: [IP] Re: In-flight confrontations can lead to charges defined as terrorism


Agreed

Begin forwarded message:

From: "Bob Frankston" <Bob19-0501@bobf.frankston.com>
Date: January 24, 2009 6:28:22 PM EST
To: "'Kevin Gainer'" <kgainer@columbus.rr.com>, <dave@farber.net>
Subject: RE: [IP] In-flight confrontations can lead to charges defined as terrorism

The point was not whether or not she was behaving reasonably but why this a patriot act issue.
 
 
From: Kevin Gainer [mailto:kgainer@columbus.rr.com] 
Sent: Saturday, January 24, 2009 17:14
To: dave@farber.net; Bob19-0501@bobf.frankston.com
Subject: Re: [IP] In-flight confrontations can lead to charges defined as terrorism
 
the article clearly states she was acting like an animal.
 
it's about time people learned how to behave in a civilized fashion.
 
she got what was coming to her and, keep in mind, in interpreting these comments, I'm a bleeding heart ultra left wing liberal absolutely opposed to the "police".
 
therefore, if the above is my view, I can tell you most assuredly the rest of the public will have even less sympathy for this woman who threw food on board an airplane.
 
regs,
 
K.
----- Original Message -----
To: ip
Sent: Saturday, January 24, 2009 11:27 AM
Subject: [IP] In-flight confrontations can lead to charges defined as terrorism
 
 
 
Begin forwarded message:
 
From: "Bob Frankston" <Bob19-0501@bobf.frankston.com>
Date: January 24, 2009 11:03:28 AM EST
Subject: In-flight confrontations can lead to charges defined as terrorism
 
Happened upon this piece in the online LATimes:
Caption from the photo: Tamera Jo Freeman lost custody of her children after an incident on a Frontier Airlines flight. "A woman spanking her child is not as great a threat to aviation as members of Al Qaeda with box cutters," says one expert.
Summary: At least 200 passengers have been convicted of felonies under the Patriot Act, often for behavior involving raised voices and profanity. Some experts say airlines are misusing the law
By Ralph Vartabedian and Peter Pae 
January 20, 2009
Reporting from Los Angeles and Oklahoma City -- Tamera Jo Freeman was on a Frontier Airlines flight to Denver in 2007 when her two children began to quarrel over the window shade and then spilled a Bloody Mary into her lap.

She spanked each of them on the thigh with three swats. It was a small incident, but one that in the heightened anxiety after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks would eventually have enormous ramifications for Freeman and her children.
. . .
 

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