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Man arrested after suspected hand grenades in carry-on prompt evacuation of Hawaii airport

The items were determined to be inert grenades

Lilith Foster-Collins
Wednesday 10 July 2024 09:07 EDT
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Akito Fukushima was arrested at 6.45am on Tuesday for first-degree ‘terroristic threatening’
Akito Fukushima was arrested at 6.45am on Tuesday for first-degree ‘terroristic threatening’ (The Hawaii Police Department)

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Andrew Feinberg

White House Correspondent

Hilo International Airport was evacuated on Tuesday after airport officials discovered two items resembling grenades during an X-ray screening.

Hawaii Police arrested a traveler, 41-year-old Akito Fukushima, for first-degree “terroristic threatening.”

TSA agents said they discovered the items around 5.30am local time, while Fukushima passed through security in departures.

Police were called at 5.44am to secure and evacuate the terminal area as a precautionary safety measure.

The department’s bomb squad arrived on the scene and determined the items to be inert grenades.

TSA agents discovered the items during an X-ray scan
TSA agents discovered the items during an X-ray scan (The Hawaii Police Department)

At 6.45am, police arrested Fukushima of Kanazawa, Japan, and transported him to HPD’s East Hawaii Detention Facility.

Fukushima remains in custody while detectives investigate. The airport resumed operations at 6.50am.

The Hawaii Police reminded the public in a press release that replicas of explosives are prohibited in checked and carry-on baggage.

The inert grenades were confiscated by police
The inert grenades were confiscated by police (The Hawaii Police Department)

The TSA has not always managed to prevent travelers from flying with prohibited items in their hand luggage.

Since February, five Americans have been arrested for illegally carrying ammunition from the US to the Turks and Caicos Islands.

In all cases, they apparently accidentally boarded flights at US airports with live rounds in their hand luggage.

The TSA launched a review in May, admitting an “oversight” had occurred, but two months on the TSA said it did not know how the ammo got past security.

Last week Louisiana Rep Garret Graves, chairman of the House aviation subcommittee, told The Independent that it’s concerning that the TSA has no idea how American tourists are managing to take ammo onto flights unnoticed.

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