Why does TSA check IDs on US flights?



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Flying out of an American airport I was surprised to learn that it's the security officials that verify if you have proper ID when you fly within the US, rather than the airline. I could understand why the airline would do it - they'd rather not have scalpers resell their tickets. But why would airport security care in the slightest about who you actually are?



I'm interested in both official TSA statements on the subject and the opinion of security experts.







share|improve this question




















  • The airlines also check IDs.
    – phoog
    Jun 7 at 5:41






  • 2




    @phoog Not in all cases. At the gate, for domestic flights, only boarding passes are checked, and one can get a boarding pass without showing ID by checking in online and using a mobile or self-printed boarding pass. That said, most airlines do check for ID when passengers check bags, but if you're not checking bags, they don't.
    – gparyani
    Jun 7 at 6:14







  • 3




    Check against no-fly lists and presumably "wanted" criminal lists.
    – djna
    Jun 7 at 9:52
















up vote
2
down vote

favorite












Flying out of an American airport I was surprised to learn that it's the security officials that verify if you have proper ID when you fly within the US, rather than the airline. I could understand why the airline would do it - they'd rather not have scalpers resell their tickets. But why would airport security care in the slightest about who you actually are?



I'm interested in both official TSA statements on the subject and the opinion of security experts.







share|improve this question




















  • The airlines also check IDs.
    – phoog
    Jun 7 at 5:41






  • 2




    @phoog Not in all cases. At the gate, for domestic flights, only boarding passes are checked, and one can get a boarding pass without showing ID by checking in online and using a mobile or self-printed boarding pass. That said, most airlines do check for ID when passengers check bags, but if you're not checking bags, they don't.
    – gparyani
    Jun 7 at 6:14







  • 3




    Check against no-fly lists and presumably "wanted" criminal lists.
    – djna
    Jun 7 at 9:52












up vote
2
down vote

favorite









up vote
2
down vote

favorite











Flying out of an American airport I was surprised to learn that it's the security officials that verify if you have proper ID when you fly within the US, rather than the airline. I could understand why the airline would do it - they'd rather not have scalpers resell their tickets. But why would airport security care in the slightest about who you actually are?



I'm interested in both official TSA statements on the subject and the opinion of security experts.







share|improve this question












Flying out of an American airport I was surprised to learn that it's the security officials that verify if you have proper ID when you fly within the US, rather than the airline. I could understand why the airline would do it - they'd rather not have scalpers resell their tickets. But why would airport security care in the slightest about who you actually are?



I'm interested in both official TSA statements on the subject and the opinion of security experts.









share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Jun 7 at 5:12









JonathanReez♦

46.5k35210457




46.5k35210457











  • The airlines also check IDs.
    – phoog
    Jun 7 at 5:41






  • 2




    @phoog Not in all cases. At the gate, for domestic flights, only boarding passes are checked, and one can get a boarding pass without showing ID by checking in online and using a mobile or self-printed boarding pass. That said, most airlines do check for ID when passengers check bags, but if you're not checking bags, they don't.
    – gparyani
    Jun 7 at 6:14







  • 3




    Check against no-fly lists and presumably "wanted" criminal lists.
    – djna
    Jun 7 at 9:52
















  • The airlines also check IDs.
    – phoog
    Jun 7 at 5:41






  • 2




    @phoog Not in all cases. At the gate, for domestic flights, only boarding passes are checked, and one can get a boarding pass without showing ID by checking in online and using a mobile or self-printed boarding pass. That said, most airlines do check for ID when passengers check bags, but if you're not checking bags, they don't.
    – gparyani
    Jun 7 at 6:14







  • 3




    Check against no-fly lists and presumably "wanted" criminal lists.
    – djna
    Jun 7 at 9:52















The airlines also check IDs.
– phoog
Jun 7 at 5:41




The airlines also check IDs.
– phoog
Jun 7 at 5:41




2




2




@phoog Not in all cases. At the gate, for domestic flights, only boarding passes are checked, and one can get a boarding pass without showing ID by checking in online and using a mobile or self-printed boarding pass. That said, most airlines do check for ID when passengers check bags, but if you're not checking bags, they don't.
– gparyani
Jun 7 at 6:14





@phoog Not in all cases. At the gate, for domestic flights, only boarding passes are checked, and one can get a boarding pass without showing ID by checking in online and using a mobile or self-printed boarding pass. That said, most airlines do check for ID when passengers check bags, but if you're not checking bags, they don't.
– gparyani
Jun 7 at 6:14





3




3




Check against no-fly lists and presumably "wanted" criminal lists.
– djna
Jun 7 at 9:52




Check against no-fly lists and presumably "wanted" criminal lists.
– djna
Jun 7 at 9:52










1 Answer
1






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oldest

votes

















up vote
5
down vote



accepted










The short answer is that the Aviation and Transportation Security Act, passed by the U.S. Congress following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, requires that for all flights originating in the United States, passenger security screening be conducted by a federal government employee. The same act created the TSA to oversee the screening process, and the TSA considers the identification check before entering the checkpoint to be a part of it.




Airlines provide the names of their passengers to the Terrorist Screening Center, a governmental unit administered by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), who then check the names against various lists of suspicious characters. Individuals on the so-called No Fly List are not permitted to board an aircraft within, to, from, or over the United States. The ID check ostensibly confirms that the individual passing through the screening is the same person as named on the ticket.



Obviously, someone with malevolent intent could obtain false identification documents and make it through screening, and indeed the 9/11 Commission Report notes multiple occasions where terrorists obtained and used fake IDs. Still, the requirement that the ID be government-issued adds a barrier, and the report also notes incidents where questions about ID led the would-be terrorists to flee, or be subjected to additional searches. Perhaps this is enough to justify the process from a political standpoint.



The requirement that screening be done by a federal employee was a reaction to low standards in the hiring and training of airport security workers prior to 9/11. For the most part, the screeners were contract workers hired by the airport or airline, and their interest was therefore to make the screening as fast and easy as possible, rather than thorough.



Later reports that some of the hijackers had invalid identification but were still allowed through (along with other security breaches), and that many of them were known to the FBI but that no warnings were passed on to the FAA or the airlines, led to very intense political pressure 1) to federalize airport screeners in order to enforce national standards and to provide Congressional oversight and 2) to have stronger enforcement of ID requirements. Such measures had bipartisan support— the only quibble was over whether the screeners should be allowed to unionize.



Not all measures which had widespread support in the months after 9/11 have proved to be unalloyed goods, even for "security theater," but such debates are outside the scope of this Stack and I do not take a position in them.






share|improve this answer
















  • 1




    "someone with malevolent intent could obtain false identification documents and make it through screening": the current system does, however, prevent another possible ploy, which would be for someone on the no-fly list to enlist a confederate who is not on the no-fly list and have that person buy a ticket, check in for the flight, and then hand the boarding pass to the person on the no-fly list, who could then board the flight were it not for the ID check in question here.
    – phoog
    Jun 7 at 18:30










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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
5
down vote



accepted










The short answer is that the Aviation and Transportation Security Act, passed by the U.S. Congress following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, requires that for all flights originating in the United States, passenger security screening be conducted by a federal government employee. The same act created the TSA to oversee the screening process, and the TSA considers the identification check before entering the checkpoint to be a part of it.




Airlines provide the names of their passengers to the Terrorist Screening Center, a governmental unit administered by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), who then check the names against various lists of suspicious characters. Individuals on the so-called No Fly List are not permitted to board an aircraft within, to, from, or over the United States. The ID check ostensibly confirms that the individual passing through the screening is the same person as named on the ticket.



Obviously, someone with malevolent intent could obtain false identification documents and make it through screening, and indeed the 9/11 Commission Report notes multiple occasions where terrorists obtained and used fake IDs. Still, the requirement that the ID be government-issued adds a barrier, and the report also notes incidents where questions about ID led the would-be terrorists to flee, or be subjected to additional searches. Perhaps this is enough to justify the process from a political standpoint.



The requirement that screening be done by a federal employee was a reaction to low standards in the hiring and training of airport security workers prior to 9/11. For the most part, the screeners were contract workers hired by the airport or airline, and their interest was therefore to make the screening as fast and easy as possible, rather than thorough.



Later reports that some of the hijackers had invalid identification but were still allowed through (along with other security breaches), and that many of them were known to the FBI but that no warnings were passed on to the FAA or the airlines, led to very intense political pressure 1) to federalize airport screeners in order to enforce national standards and to provide Congressional oversight and 2) to have stronger enforcement of ID requirements. Such measures had bipartisan support— the only quibble was over whether the screeners should be allowed to unionize.



Not all measures which had widespread support in the months after 9/11 have proved to be unalloyed goods, even for "security theater," but such debates are outside the scope of this Stack and I do not take a position in them.






share|improve this answer
















  • 1




    "someone with malevolent intent could obtain false identification documents and make it through screening": the current system does, however, prevent another possible ploy, which would be for someone on the no-fly list to enlist a confederate who is not on the no-fly list and have that person buy a ticket, check in for the flight, and then hand the boarding pass to the person on the no-fly list, who could then board the flight were it not for the ID check in question here.
    – phoog
    Jun 7 at 18:30














up vote
5
down vote



accepted










The short answer is that the Aviation and Transportation Security Act, passed by the U.S. Congress following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, requires that for all flights originating in the United States, passenger security screening be conducted by a federal government employee. The same act created the TSA to oversee the screening process, and the TSA considers the identification check before entering the checkpoint to be a part of it.




Airlines provide the names of their passengers to the Terrorist Screening Center, a governmental unit administered by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), who then check the names against various lists of suspicious characters. Individuals on the so-called No Fly List are not permitted to board an aircraft within, to, from, or over the United States. The ID check ostensibly confirms that the individual passing through the screening is the same person as named on the ticket.



Obviously, someone with malevolent intent could obtain false identification documents and make it through screening, and indeed the 9/11 Commission Report notes multiple occasions where terrorists obtained and used fake IDs. Still, the requirement that the ID be government-issued adds a barrier, and the report also notes incidents where questions about ID led the would-be terrorists to flee, or be subjected to additional searches. Perhaps this is enough to justify the process from a political standpoint.



The requirement that screening be done by a federal employee was a reaction to low standards in the hiring and training of airport security workers prior to 9/11. For the most part, the screeners were contract workers hired by the airport or airline, and their interest was therefore to make the screening as fast and easy as possible, rather than thorough.



Later reports that some of the hijackers had invalid identification but were still allowed through (along with other security breaches), and that many of them were known to the FBI but that no warnings were passed on to the FAA or the airlines, led to very intense political pressure 1) to federalize airport screeners in order to enforce national standards and to provide Congressional oversight and 2) to have stronger enforcement of ID requirements. Such measures had bipartisan support— the only quibble was over whether the screeners should be allowed to unionize.



Not all measures which had widespread support in the months after 9/11 have proved to be unalloyed goods, even for "security theater," but such debates are outside the scope of this Stack and I do not take a position in them.






share|improve this answer
















  • 1




    "someone with malevolent intent could obtain false identification documents and make it through screening": the current system does, however, prevent another possible ploy, which would be for someone on the no-fly list to enlist a confederate who is not on the no-fly list and have that person buy a ticket, check in for the flight, and then hand the boarding pass to the person on the no-fly list, who could then board the flight were it not for the ID check in question here.
    – phoog
    Jun 7 at 18:30












up vote
5
down vote



accepted







up vote
5
down vote



accepted






The short answer is that the Aviation and Transportation Security Act, passed by the U.S. Congress following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, requires that for all flights originating in the United States, passenger security screening be conducted by a federal government employee. The same act created the TSA to oversee the screening process, and the TSA considers the identification check before entering the checkpoint to be a part of it.




Airlines provide the names of their passengers to the Terrorist Screening Center, a governmental unit administered by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), who then check the names against various lists of suspicious characters. Individuals on the so-called No Fly List are not permitted to board an aircraft within, to, from, or over the United States. The ID check ostensibly confirms that the individual passing through the screening is the same person as named on the ticket.



Obviously, someone with malevolent intent could obtain false identification documents and make it through screening, and indeed the 9/11 Commission Report notes multiple occasions where terrorists obtained and used fake IDs. Still, the requirement that the ID be government-issued adds a barrier, and the report also notes incidents where questions about ID led the would-be terrorists to flee, or be subjected to additional searches. Perhaps this is enough to justify the process from a political standpoint.



The requirement that screening be done by a federal employee was a reaction to low standards in the hiring and training of airport security workers prior to 9/11. For the most part, the screeners were contract workers hired by the airport or airline, and their interest was therefore to make the screening as fast and easy as possible, rather than thorough.



Later reports that some of the hijackers had invalid identification but were still allowed through (along with other security breaches), and that many of them were known to the FBI but that no warnings were passed on to the FAA or the airlines, led to very intense political pressure 1) to federalize airport screeners in order to enforce national standards and to provide Congressional oversight and 2) to have stronger enforcement of ID requirements. Such measures had bipartisan support— the only quibble was over whether the screeners should be allowed to unionize.



Not all measures which had widespread support in the months after 9/11 have proved to be unalloyed goods, even for "security theater," but such debates are outside the scope of this Stack and I do not take a position in them.






share|improve this answer












The short answer is that the Aviation and Transportation Security Act, passed by the U.S. Congress following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, requires that for all flights originating in the United States, passenger security screening be conducted by a federal government employee. The same act created the TSA to oversee the screening process, and the TSA considers the identification check before entering the checkpoint to be a part of it.




Airlines provide the names of their passengers to the Terrorist Screening Center, a governmental unit administered by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), who then check the names against various lists of suspicious characters. Individuals on the so-called No Fly List are not permitted to board an aircraft within, to, from, or over the United States. The ID check ostensibly confirms that the individual passing through the screening is the same person as named on the ticket.



Obviously, someone with malevolent intent could obtain false identification documents and make it through screening, and indeed the 9/11 Commission Report notes multiple occasions where terrorists obtained and used fake IDs. Still, the requirement that the ID be government-issued adds a barrier, and the report also notes incidents where questions about ID led the would-be terrorists to flee, or be subjected to additional searches. Perhaps this is enough to justify the process from a political standpoint.



The requirement that screening be done by a federal employee was a reaction to low standards in the hiring and training of airport security workers prior to 9/11. For the most part, the screeners were contract workers hired by the airport or airline, and their interest was therefore to make the screening as fast and easy as possible, rather than thorough.



Later reports that some of the hijackers had invalid identification but were still allowed through (along with other security breaches), and that many of them were known to the FBI but that no warnings were passed on to the FAA or the airlines, led to very intense political pressure 1) to federalize airport screeners in order to enforce national standards and to provide Congressional oversight and 2) to have stronger enforcement of ID requirements. Such measures had bipartisan support— the only quibble was over whether the screeners should be allowed to unionize.



Not all measures which had widespread support in the months after 9/11 have proved to be unalloyed goods, even for "security theater," but such debates are outside the scope of this Stack and I do not take a position in them.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jun 7 at 18:02









choster

31.6k487141




31.6k487141







  • 1




    "someone with malevolent intent could obtain false identification documents and make it through screening": the current system does, however, prevent another possible ploy, which would be for someone on the no-fly list to enlist a confederate who is not on the no-fly list and have that person buy a ticket, check in for the flight, and then hand the boarding pass to the person on the no-fly list, who could then board the flight were it not for the ID check in question here.
    – phoog
    Jun 7 at 18:30












  • 1




    "someone with malevolent intent could obtain false identification documents and make it through screening": the current system does, however, prevent another possible ploy, which would be for someone on the no-fly list to enlist a confederate who is not on the no-fly list and have that person buy a ticket, check in for the flight, and then hand the boarding pass to the person on the no-fly list, who could then board the flight were it not for the ID check in question here.
    – phoog
    Jun 7 at 18:30







1




1




"someone with malevolent intent could obtain false identification documents and make it through screening": the current system does, however, prevent another possible ploy, which would be for someone on the no-fly list to enlist a confederate who is not on the no-fly list and have that person buy a ticket, check in for the flight, and then hand the boarding pass to the person on the no-fly list, who could then board the flight were it not for the ID check in question here.
– phoog
Jun 7 at 18:30




"someone with malevolent intent could obtain false identification documents and make it through screening": the current system does, however, prevent another possible ploy, which would be for someone on the no-fly list to enlist a confederate who is not on the no-fly list and have that person buy a ticket, check in for the flight, and then hand the boarding pass to the person on the no-fly list, who could then board the flight were it not for the ID check in question here.
– phoog
Jun 7 at 18:30












 

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