Airport Luggage Checker Swipes Electronics to Sell on eBay

Posted on 13 October 2008

As a screener at Newark Liberty International Airport, Pythias Brown was supposed to keep deadly objects off airplanes. But for the past year, Brown has been swiping electronic equipment from luggage of the passengers he was supposed to protect.

A laptop here, a cell phone there. Within months, he had snatched more than 100 items, authorities say.

But this summer, Brown got too ambitious for his own good stealing a $47,900 camera from an HBO crew and a camcorder from a CNN employee, authorities said.

Brown attracted the attention of one of his victims — and eventually investigators — when he tried to sell the equipment on eBay, the online auction site, authorities said.

Federal investigators charged the 48-year-old Maplewood, NJ resident this week with theft. He is scheduled to appear Wednesday in federal court in Newark. If convicted, he faces up to 10 years in prison.

Officials at the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), which employees the airport screeners, said Brown has been placed on administrative leave and, based on their own findings, will soon be fired. Brown has worked as a screener at Newark Liberty since 2002.

When investigators raided Brown’s home last week, they seized a trove of contraband. Among the items seized were 66 cameras, 31 laptop computers, 20 cell phones, 17 sets of electronic games, 13 pieces of jewelry, 12 GPS devices, 11 MP3 players, eight camera lenses, six video cameras and two DVD players.

Brown confessed that he began stealing two to three items per week from the airport beginning in September 2007. He told authorities he put most of the stolen items up for sale on eBay.

One of the items was a Sony camcorder that was swiped from the bag of a CNN employee who was a passenger on flight from Newark to Houston in July 2008.

In August, the CNN employee contacted police to report that the stolen camera was listed for sale on eBay. Authorities said the camera was posted by a person with the user ID “alirla.”

Investigators then used their own eBay account to place the winning bid on the camera, and arranged to pay Brown through a PayPal account.

Authorities said they gave Brown an address in Marlton where he sent the camera. On the package, Brown listed his Maplewood home as the return address. The serial numbers on the camera matched those of the stolen CNN equipment.

Video images from security cameras at the Newark post office from where the shipment was mailed linked Brown to the package. Brown’s credit card was used to pay for the postage.

As investigators built their case against Brown, an HBO employee reported the theft of a $47,900 camera from a bag he had checked at Newark Liberty for a flight to London in September.

Again, authorities found the camera posted for sale on eBay by “alirla,” according to the affidavit. They traced the eBay account to a Verizon Internet address listed to Brown’s fiancee. The couple, who had their wedding scheduled for Oct. 12, lived together at the Maplewood residence where the Verizon account was registered.

Authorities raided the home on Oct. 1.

The TSA worked closely with homeland security investigators to bring the charges against Brown. More than 300 TSA employees have been terminated for theft.

Source: NJ.com Link filed under Weird US News

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