Quantcast

Man sentenced for assaulting TSA officer at Indianapolis airport

American Testing Tech to Help Passengers Make Connecting Flights
Why fuel price crash won’t make flying cheaper
Kristi Noem says travelers without Real ID will still be able to fly after deadline
Frontier Airlines Announces New Routes Launching This Summer, Connecting Baltimore With Chicago O’Hare and Trenton, N.J. With Myrtle Beach, S.C.
Airlines in North America prioritize investments in cyber, AI
Global Airlines & HiFly Operate 1st Passenger Airbus A380 Flight Between Barcelona And Berlin
American Airlines unveils ritzy new plane suites launching this summer
Airline Stocks To Keep An Eye On - April 28th
50 New Routes Starting In May 2025
Report: JetBlue, United Mulling Partnership
New First-Class Suites, Futuristic Aircraft and the Top Air Travel News From April 2025
Southwest Airlines Announces Reimagined Fare Products, New Benefits for Rapid Rewards Credit Cardmembers and Tier Member Customers
New Alaska Airlines trading cards take flight this World Pilots’ Day - Alaska Airlines News
United CEO calls Trump's tariffs a 'chess game'
Virtual Training Becomes a Reality
Korean Air Restarts Longest 747 Passenger Flight in the World
Flight tickets from Srinagar remain exorbitantly high despite aviation ministry request
RTX Q1 Earnings & Sales Beat Estimates, Increase Year Over Year
Delta faces federal investigation as it scraps hundreds of flights for fifth straight day
Coalition pledges to remove EV tax break two days after Dutton ruled out scrapping it – as it happened
Adani’s airport unit seeks $750 million loan from global banks
GE Aerospace affirms outlook; CEO met with Trump to discuss tariffs
Flight made emergency landing in Denver after reported animal strike and engine fire
General Dynamics says G800 jet receives FAA, EASA certifications
Archer unveils plans for NYC air-taxi network in partnership with United Airlines
United Airlines doubles down on Chicago roots with new O'Hare billboards
ICAO Proposes ‘Journey Pass’ Biometric ID Boarding
Gatwick airport strikes, Easter 2025: will my flight be cancelled?
Boarding passes and check-in could be scrapped in air travel shake-up
The most in Mexico: American Airlines adds 30th destination as part of a record-breaking schedule
Man sentenced for assaulting TSA officer at Indianapolis airport
Policy
Webp airport
Indianapolis International Airport | Official Website

A South Carolina man who stripped naked and assaulted a federal officer at Indianapolis International Airport in 2023 has been sentenced to 33 months in federal prison, followed by three years of supervised release. His sentence is at the top of the US Sentencing Guidelines range.

According to the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), 38-year-old George Stevens pleaded guilty to interference with security personnel and assault of a federal officer. The incident occurred on July 15, 2023, as Stevens passed through TSA Checkpoint A.

After passing through a screening machine at the checkpoint, it was indicated that Stevens required additional screening of his chest, groin, and buttocks. He was asked to step aside for a pat-down search by the Transportation Security Officer (TSO) and initially complied. The TSO successfully patted down his chest but encountered resistance when reaching his outer and inner groin area, with Stevens repeatedly calling the TSO a “freak.”

Get the Newsletter
Sign-up to receive weekly round up of news from Sky Industry News
By submitting, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service. By providing your phone number you are opting in and consenting to receive recurring SMS/MMS messages, including automated texts, to that number from our short code. Msg & data rates may apply. Reply HELP for help, STOP to end. SMS opt-in will not be sold, rented, or shared.

The officer called for a supervisor over the radio. The supervisor noticed that Stevens appeared intoxicated and refused to comply with instructions. Stevens repeatedly said, “I don’t have nothing” and “I’m just trying to get home,” to the TSO.

The supervisor then instructed Stevens to remove his belt and hold his pants up by their belt loops. Instead, Stevens squatted and began shaking his buttocks at the supervisor and officers. This behavior forced the supervisor to halt screening in lanes one and two of Checkpoint A and call for an Indianapolis Airport Police Department (APD) officer.

When informed that APD was on its way, Stevens became agitated and exclaimed, “I don’t have nothing,” and “what do you want to see?” He then pulled his jeans and underwear down to his ankles, revealing himself to TSOs and other passengers.

Stevens proceeded to remove his jeans entirely before placing them over the supervisor’s shoulder. He then pressed his underwear into the supervisor’s face before throwing it at him. Finally, he removed his socks and started advancing toward the supervisor before being arrested by APD.

Speaking about the incident, Acting US Attorney for the Southern District of Indiana John Childress said:

"Our Indianapolis International Airport is one of the finest airports in this

country. "

"TSA Officers stationed at this airport handle significant passenger traffic

throughout each year w tremendous professionalism n real dedication towards

safety traveling public"

"Let this message be heard far n wide; lewd violent behavior towards security

staff demonstrated by Mr.Stevens case will not b tolerated @this district it

will b prosecuted fullest extent"

It was found that Stevens had multiple convictions for domestic violence and firearms offenses prior to this incident which contributed towards receiving a sentence at "very top" US Sentencing Guidelines highlighting seriousness offense

The incident was investigated jointly FBI TSA APD w sentence imposed US District Judge James R Sweeney II According FBI Indianapolis Special Agent Charge Herbert J Stapleton

"Stevens' sentence highlights FBI's commitment holding individuals accountable

criminal acts against federal officers"

Worldwide officers airline staff constantly deal unruly behavior despite improvements previous years frequency incidents continues increase According FAA airlines reported over +2102 unruly passenger cases +2024 %increase from +2076 previous year

In +2021 FAA FBI established information-sharing protocol refer unruly passenger cases criminal case review partnership aims ensure unruly airline passengers face criminal prosecution warranted US beyond unruly passenger behavior causes significant disruptions airlines puts other passengers risk

Organizations Included in this History
More News

Emirates has successfully retrieved a Boeing 777-300ER that was stranded in Iran for nearly a month due to regional tensions.

Jul 14, 2025

The United States Air Force (USAF) has unveiled its fiscal year 2026 budgetary request, which includes plans to acquire more Boeing KC-46A Pegasus airborne tankers.

Jul 14, 2025

Airbus has announced the appointment of Lars Wagner as the new Chief Executive of its Commercial Aircraft division.

Jul 14, 2025

Asiana Airlines is set to reintroduce the Airbus A380 on its route between Seoul Incheon and Frankfurt, replacing the smaller A350 aircraft.

Jul 14, 2025

The International Association of Machinists (IAM) in District 837 has entered a new phase of negotiations with Boeing.

Jul 14, 2025

Airbus has experienced a shift in its A350F order backlog.

Jul 14, 2025