TSA: 1 in custody after suspicious item found in luggage at Miami airport prompts evacuation

By Alan Diaz, AP
Friday, September 3, 2010

Miami airport evacuated when suspicious item found

MIAMI — A passenger was detained and four of Miami International Airport’s six concourses along with an onsite hotel were evacuated after a screener spotted something suspicious in a checked bag, authorities said.

A police bomb squad spent hours scouring the airport and passengers had to be evacuated from the complex Thursday night and airport roadways were closed down, police and airport officials said, describing the shutdown of the four concourses as a public safety precaution.

The airport fully reopened just after 4 a.m. Friday before the first scheduled morning departures, which signaled the start of the peak Labor Day weekend.

“Everything’s back to normal,” airport spokesman Greg Chin told The Associated Press soon after the closed concourses reopened.

He said the end of the evacuation order largely coincided with the nighttime drop-off in flights. Passengers, workers and others were allowed back in just as the airport was expecting the first of 1,500 passengers on flights between 4 a.m. and 6 a.m. alone — and more thereafter.

The Miami International Airport Hotel, which is located near the airport’s international terminal, was also evacuated, Chin said.

The Transportation Security Administration declined to identify the passenger, saying in a terse statement that the screener spotted something suspicious in a checked back at about 9 p.m. Thursday.

“The passenger was located and is now in law enforcement custody,” TSA’s statement said.

The statement also did not say what the suspicious item was but said a police bomb squad and other law enforcement agents deployed to the airport soon after.

The federal agency responsible for air travel security said four of the six concourses in the 2-mile long complex — Terminals E, F, G, and H — had been evacuated beginning late Thursday.

Miami-Dade Police said a bomb squad spent hours at the airport with fire officials and the others. Fire trucks and police vehicles stood by and a hazardous material team was spotted at the scene.

Police spokesman Alvaro Zableta had urged those with scheduled departures Friday to check with local air carriers.

Airport spokesman Greg Chin said between 100 and 200 passengers were evacuated initially.

“I’m still not sure how many flights came in during this time, but any that did were relocated to the eastern or western ends of the airport,” Chin said, adding parts of Concourses D and J remained open to flights while the evacuation order was in effect for remaining areas.

Associated Press photographer Alan Diaz in Miami and Associated Press writer Bill Cormier in Atlanta contributed to this report.

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