Air Marshals... any volunteers?

Covert Mission

New member
FAA News Federal Aviation Administration, Washington, DC 20591
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 2000
Contact: Rebecca Trexler
Phone: 202-267-3462
Fact Sheet: FAA Federal Air Marshal Program

The Federal Aviation Administration¹s Federal Air Marshal program is an expansion of the Sky Marshal program of the 1970s designed to stop hijackings to and from Cuba. The current program was created shortly after the hijacking of TWA 847 in June 1985. During that incident, two Lebanese Shiite Moslems hijacked a Boeing 727 departing Athens and diverted it to Beirut where they were joined by additional hijackers. During a two-week confrontation, the hijackers demanded the release of Shiite prisoners held by Israel and murdered Robert Stethem, a U.S. Navy diver who was a passenger on board the plane.

In response to this hostage ordeal and the upsurge in terrorism in the Middle East, then-President Ronald Reagan directed the Secretary of Transportation, in cooperation with the Secretary of State, to explore immediately an expansion of the FAA¹s armed Sky Marshal program aboard international flights for U.S. air carriers. On August 8, 1985, Congress enacted Public Law 99-83, the International Security and Development Cooperation Act, which established the explicit statutory basis for the Federal Air Marshal program.

Since 1985, the Federal Air Marshal program has provided specially trained, armed teams of FAA civil aviation security specialists for deployment worldwide on anti-hijacking missions. The program is based on minimum use of force, but that force can be lethal. The FAA, therefore, sets a premium on the selection, training and discipline of this elite corps of employees. Those who volunteer for the marshals must first pass initial psychological screening and fitness testing. Those who make the force must then undergo sophisticated, realistic law enforcement training. All Federal Air Marshals must meet stringent physical fitness requirements and firearm proficiency standards. In addition, before every mission they fly, the marshals go through recurrent training and standardized preparation.

The Federal Air Marshal tactical training facility and operational headquarters is located at the William J. Hughes Technical Center in Atlantic City, N.J. The marshals¹ training facilities are extensive and include three different outdoor ranges with moving targets, a 360-degree live-fire shoothouse configured as both a narrow-body and a wide-body aircraft with computer-controlled targets and a bulletproof observation platform, an indoor laser disc "judgement pistol shooting" interactive training room and a close-quarters countermeasures/personal defense training room with protective equipment and dummies. The program also uses an inactive five-story air traffic control tower, a retired B-727 narrow-body aircraft and a retired L-1011 wide-body aircraft for on-board exercises, a modern classroom, a state-of-the-art fitness facility, and an operations center capable of secure communications worldwide.

As with most areas of civil aviation security, only limited information about the Federal Air Marshal program can be made public. The FAA will not reveal the number or identity of the marshals, the details of their training, nor the routes they fly. No one on board a flight will know an air marshal is present except for the pilot and flight crew. What can be said publicly is that the Federal Air Marshals are a full-time dedicated force that continuously deploys throughout the world on all the major U.S. carriers in areas where terrorist activities indicate the highest probability of attacks. Federal Air Marshals fly every day of the year.

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Dave R

New member
I'll bet they would get a LOT of enlistees about now.

'Twould be really cool if they would deputize volunteers.

I would gladly undergo some training if I could "fly free" as an Air Marshall. And a significant number of air marshalls would be an effective way of discouraging air terrorism. No way of knowing who was trained to take down a hijacker if needed.
 

H&K compact

New member
The thing that scares me would be getting ratted out by a flight attendant that wants to safe her own skin by letting the hijackers know who where the marshals are sitting on the plane.:eek:
 

Covert Mission

New member
The info is the latest i found. I'm sure they are hiring intermittently, and maybe a lot soon. I would do it in a heartbeat, if I could.
 

1031

New member
I could imagine that whoever does this job will have to be one hell of a good shot with a handgun, under pressure. No room for error when you are facing multiple tangos on an airplane.
 

sapienza

New member
I saw a show on TLC or Discovery once about the Air Marshalls. They are, in technical terms, bad asses.

They showed one of the training activities the marshalls did, which involved a full-scale mockup of an airplane cabin. I believe all the seats were filled with dummies to represent passengers.

They had a number of targest (something like 2 to 5) in the cabin as well, which were meant to represent the bad guys. At a given signal, the air marshall had to draw, stand up, and put a bullet through the head of every bad guy he could see, as fast as possible.

Awe-inspring speed and accuracy on the part of the marshall was what I most remember about that part of the show.

...

dear lord, if only we'd had air marshalls on those airplanes ...
 
P

PreserveFreedom

Guest
I could handle a job like that. When you say "voulenteers" do you mean it is a free job or do you get paid? To get firearms involved let's see...

I'll take a S&W 38spl airweight titanium snubbie on my ankle and a Ruger MKII under my coat please. :D
 

Bob Locke

New member
Where do I and my Glock 19 make application?

I just applied to the local PD, but I'd be happy to put that on hold for this assignment.

Maybe those thousands of rounds fired at IDPA matches could go for more than a lot of fun after all.
 

Dave R

New member
Tried the search, got no hits on "Marshall" or derivatives, nor "Sky".

They had an opening for a test pilot, though.
 

Cavè Canem

New member
For whoever said they would get ratted out by the flight attendant, that as far as I know could not happen. The crew would not be made aware of the fact that an air marshall was on board and if they knew there was one, why would they give up the only person that could possibly save them?

But like a said, im sure the crew would have no idea one was even flying aboard.

My G23 and I are looking for an application.
 

EricM

New member
I'd rather see the FAA disbanded and let each airline set its own policy for passenger security. That way a market of ideas would be created that would produce the best security at the least cost versus the one size fits all approach that we have now. Some airlines might choose to strip search every passenger prior to boarding the plane, and others might allow passengers to be armed, etc. Let the paying public choose what it likes best. I would fly on the armed airline :).

But that's just me.
 

Covert Mission

New member
Air Marshals: commentary by James Fallows

EXCERPT from ------------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-000073778sep13.story?coll=la-news-comment-opinions

Read the full commentary there...


COMMENTARY

Step One: Station a Marshal Outside Every Cockpit Door, By JAMES FALLOWS

James Fallows, national correspondent of the Atlantic Monthly, is author of "Free Flight," published in July by Public Affairs Books

September 13 2001

Two days before the disaster, I was planning to fly over the World Trade Center myself.
Last Sunday afternoon, I was piloting a little propeller plane from a small airport outside Boston to another outside Washington... But we were eager to get home, and we planned to come that way again soon.
... cont'd...

Therefore we should begin with one cheap, low-tech, instantly applicable solution with a big potential payoff: on-board guards.

Today's air travel system has three main vulnerabilities.
* Airspace in general is surprisingly open. ...There is no prohibited airspace over New York City, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago.
... Imposing serious controls on where planes fly would require huge new enforcement efforts and would gum up much airborne commerce.
* The airline system makes certain cities vulnerable.... any air travel will leave cities vulnerable.
* The sheer volume of passenger traffic is too high. The screening system for normal flights could become as safe and thorough as the screening system for Air Force One, but only if passengers were willing to get to airports many hours before a flight. Any system careful enough to eliminate sophisticated terrorists also would be cumbersome enough to negate the speed advantage of traveling by air.

So what can we do? I don't know what the eventual answer should be, but I know the first step: hiring armed marshals or security guards to sit at the front of each airplane cabin, protecting the cockpit door. They couldn't prevent bombs being sneaked into luggage. But they could forestall another episode in which the airplane itself becomes a mass-terror device.
Compared to other ways of beefing up airport security, this step would be cheaper, quicker and less intrusive. No one would like this reminder of our new vulnerability, but it is better than ever seeing again what we saw Tuesday.
 

rock_jock

New member
Better screening for bombs, air marshals, and improved cabin door.

Actually, I have an even better idea. Right now, it is possible to fly AND LAND a jet by autopilot. What about a system where a pilot, in a time of duress, could hit a panic button that gives control of the plane to the autopilot and the only way to gain control back is by entering a predetermined code given by ground control when they are convniced that the situation is in order? Of course, not all planes have this system, so rerofitting would be necessary, but a hijacker would be at the mercy of the autopilot and the folks on the ground.
 
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