What happens to items seized at airports

Ripping open one of four waist-high cardboard boxes on a cargo bay here, Steve Ekin pulled out corkscrews, pocketknives and assorted hand tools before finding an electric impact drill as long as his arm. “You’d think people would know better,” he said.

The original price tag, still on the drill, read $170. Mr. Ekin planned to sell it for about $15 at a store opened last October in a warehouse district northeast of Atlanta. He’s the director of Georgia’s Surplus Property Division, the agency in charge of selling the government’s used belongings. These days, he’s also selling the items that trigger alarms at security checkpoints at nearby Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, the world’s busiest in terms of passengers and flights.

Nearly six years after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks — and a blitz of government marketing about what is and isn’t allowed — thousands of travelers still attempt to board aircraft with scissors, awls, hammers and saws. They even try to carry on box cutters, the weapons apparently used by some of the 9/11 attackers to commandeer and crash four planes.

Some states trash or destroy some of the items, along with the shampoos, toothpaste and other gels and liquids banned in large amounts after a British bomb scare last August.

But many states now sell the banned objects and keep the proceeds. Alabama, Arkansas and Illinois tout them online. Kentucky enjoys a cottage industry in Internet sales of miniature Louisville Sluggers surrendered after factory tours in the baseball bats’ hometown. Pennsylvania, which collects goods at 13 airports including New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport, says it collects a total of 2.5 tons of TSA goods a month and that the items, sold on eBay, since 2004 have raised $360,000 for state coffers, as of June.

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LifeWay Christian Resources of the Southern Baptist Convention Growing on iTunes

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (BP)–Individuals searching for everything from Beth Moore Bible studies to Vacation Bible School songs need look no further than their iTunes account.

In 2006, LifeWay Christian Resources of the Southern Baptist Convention began placing downloadable audio files on Apple’s iTunes website, the world’s largest such catalog that features more than 5 million songs and nearly 1,000 television shows and movies.

“iTunes is the easiest and most customer-friendly way to get music to our customers,” said Aaron Linne, a customer experience technician at LifeWay. “It allows us to reach beyond regular channels to meet people’s needs.”

Today, LifeWay offers more than 500 tracks on the popular audio repository, and that list is ever-growing.

While choral music comprises an abundance of the content LifeWay offers on iTunes, the most popular items continue to be Beth Moore Bible studies such as “Jesus, the One and Only” and “Daniel: Lives of Prophecy, Words of Integrity,” the study that launched LifeWay’s women’s area in iTunes.

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My Bible Community Got Sturminated

sturmgeeding.jpgYesterday my Bible Community at Irving Bible Church got the unique opportunity to have sports radio 1310 The Ticket’s Bob Sturm of BaD Radio come talk to our class.  In short, he’s a Christian that works in a very non-Christian atmosphere, since The Ticket is more guy radio than sports radio.  And people like me listen to this radio station non-stop.

It was a real blessing to hear him be interviewed by one of our pastors and hear him talk about his very conservative upbringing, to his life at Liberty University, to moving from the 166th radio market to 5th radio market in the country in one jump, and how his faith is sometimes made fun of and what he does to try to walk the walk and talk the talk when given the opportunity.  How conservative was his upbringing?  Liberty was considered liberal – yikes!.

Also, I ran into my pastor at dinner while wearing my ‘Bono is my pastor’ t-shirt.  He smiled at me and I told him that he (Pastor Andy) was really my pastor, and he responded, “Bono actually is a real talented pastor.”

I love my church.

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