TSA: Needles Are Not A Threat

Officials on Tuesday were still trying to determine how needles got into turkey sandwiches being served on four Delta flights last weekend, but they said it doesn't appear to be a national security issue
July 17, 2012
3 min read

Officials on Tuesday were still trying to determine how needles got into turkey sandwiches being served on four Delta flights last weekend, but they said it doesn't appear to be a national security issue.

The Transportation Security Administration said it conducts inspections to ensure airlines and food contractors comply with security requirements for catering.

The sandwiches were made by Gate Gourmet, one of the world's largest airline caterers, with facilities on five continents. The company serves many airlines, but only Delta flights appeared to be affected.

The website for Gate Gourmet said the in-flight catering company "conducts extensive monitoring and methodical food safety checks thousands of times a day at all of our kitchens."

Yet, needles still ended up in sandwiches for business class passengers on the Delta flights from Amsterdam --- including two to Atlanta, one to Minneapolis and one to Seattle --- and injured a passenger on the flight to Minneapolis.

TSA said it does not believe the incident represents a threat to national security.

Gate Gourmet spokeswoman Christina Ulosevich said it "does not appear that this occurred at or after" the food was transferred to Delta, and the catering company is conducting its own investigation into the matter.

Gate Gourmet's parent company, Gategroup, has a safety and security operation called Gate Safe that handles airline catering inspection and monitoring.

"Obviously, there needs to be a review of their procedures," said California-based food safety consultant Jeff Nelken.

Nelken said some large processing facilities have metal detection equipment to scan boxes or trays of food to detect any metal that does not belong in the food. He said he usually recommends that food producing facilities get rid of pins used to hold up schedules or menus, "because the odds are these can pop out very easily, drop on the floor [and] become something to be used by someone disgruntled with management."

FBI Atlanta is conducting a criminal investigation and leading criminal investigative efforts in the United States, while coordinating with the FBI's legal attache in Amsterdam. Dutch police and the Netherlands Food and Consumer Product Safety Authority are also investigating the incident.

In the short term, people likely will be "a little more tentative" and nervous about airline food, but it probably won't have much long-term effect, said Monique Turner, a professor of public health at George Washington University.

"People get more worried when these things are accidents, because accidents are hard to predict," Turner said.

The Associated Press contributed to this article.

Victim taking course of medication

Jim Tonjes was on his way to Minneapolis after visiting his mother-in-law in Amsterdam when he bit into a turkey sandwich and a needle punctured the roof of his mouth. He's on a 28-day course of preventive medication. A second passenger on the Delta flight also found a needle.

Copyright 2012 The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

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