Somebody tried to board a plane in Miami with Python on their hard drive. What’s the big deal? It’s just a high-level programming language for general-purpose programming, for Pete’s sake!
…oh …I see …it was AN ACTUAL PYTHON – a ball python, crammed into some pantyhose, stuffed into a hard drive, hidden in checked luggage, bound for Barbados.
The US Transportation Security Administration (TSA) on Tuesday put up an Instagram post in which it said that its agents had “prevented a young Ball Python from flying the friendly skies” on Sunday.
The would-be snake smuggler was a woman on her way to Barbados. She had stuffed the snakelet into some pantyhose, then stuck it in a hard drive that she put into her checked luggage. Going by photos posted on the TSA’s Instagram post, the python didn’t suffocate, though it probably would have liked to stuff its owner into a hard drive and see how she liked it.
The python was handed over to the US Fish & Wildlife Service, and the service cited and fined the would-be snake smuggler for unspecified transgressions that should have included aggravated infliction of meme generation involving Samuel L. Jackson.
A TSA spokeswoman told the Miami Herald that an officer had discovered an “organic mass” inside an electronics device, which raises security flags. A TSA bomb expert was called into the baggage screening room to investigate the hard drive’s innards, and that’s when he discovered the mass was a live snake.
TSA spokeswoman Sari Koshetz told the newspaper that while the snake wasn’t a terrorist threat, there are plenty of times when wild animals in the cargo hold are in fact quite dangerous. Like, say, the crocodile that chewed through its plastic container (Warning: Tupperware is not recommended for transport of flesh-tearing reptiles) and was found loose in the cargo hold of a plane headed to Melbourne. Koshetz:
While this mass inside the electronic device was obviously not an imminent terrorist threat to the traveling public, the interception did prevent a possible wildlife threat on an aircraft. Animals of many species have been known to escape and chew through wires with fatal results.
Tell us about it! We’ve already brought you the shocking (get it??!!) news about squirrels possibly wreaking cyber outages with their rodenty chewing through wires, not to mention the RAT that gobbled up $17,500 in an ATM. Oh, excuse me, that would be the lowercase rat, one of which literally ate a smorgasbord of cash when it got in through a network cable access hole but then couldn’t quite figure out how to get back out.
In closing, we all need to heed TSA agent Bob Burns recommendations about what we should and shouldn’t bring onboard airplanes, including Satan’s pizza cutter. That thing will poke your eye out. Probably some innards, too.
John Woelkers (@JohnWoelkers)
That wasn’t a hard drive. It was stuffed into the computer case which is entirely different than a hard drive.
Paul Ducklin
It’s a NAS box, isn’t it? (IOW, a computer built to act at a hard drive.)
I think it’s OK to call it “a hard drive”.
Paul Timmins
It’s not even a NAS, because it doesn’t attach to a network (the N in NAS). It’s just a usb 3.0 external drive enclosure.
Paul Ducklin
Er, yes, that is what I think I meant :-)
I meant “attached storage” and forgot what “N” stood for.
The thing I didn’t know was that you got USB 3 connectors in that “big B” size. Live and learn.
Paul Timmins
I looked at the picture, it’s a single external hard drive enclosure, with a USB 3.0 interface. I’d probably call it an external hard drive with the actual drive removed, and I’m an IT professional. I think the TSA did fine naming what it was under the circumstances. What would you prefer they call it?
s31064
Actually, if you look at the picture again, you can see the drive is still there, under the snake’s pantyhose.
Randy Rekow
I was wondering, all I could imagine was a HDD from years back. The 1st ones plastic cover area would actually be big enough to accommodate a baby sized python but I couldn’t imagine one of those HDD’s being in use today. Collectors are still interested in them but…
Paul Ducklin
The TSA pic shows a device with a port labelled USB 3.0 so it can’t be *that* old.
Wilderness
Poor snake!
Lisa Vaas
My thoughts exactly! Though I was torn between sympathy for the snake and awareness that ball pythons aren’t native to Florida, and of course not to Barbados (most snakes were wiped out by mongooses). If introduced, ball pythons could make things bad for the tiny little pipsqueak Barbados native, the threadsnake—the smallest known species of snake. Save Their Threadsnakes!
Grant Bruner
It is exactly as you discribe it. A hard drive caddy, I own five of thses units. They hold two hard drives each