Whenever you see a Pelican hard case, you
know that the contents are valuable. That’s why
they have become a favorite target of baggage
handling thieves at Miami’s International
Airport. In the last week of March, we learned of three separate
incidents in which Pelican cases were opened as they wove
their way through the innards of the Miami baggage handling
system .
Kevin Gill, on his way to Houston, saw his Pelican case
loaded on the plane, intact, in Providenciales (Turks and
Cacios). Yet it was not on the baggage carousel, nor in baggage
service, upon his arrival in Miami. When he reached Houston,
the case was on the conveyer, without the twin Master
Padlocks. Missing were a CD player and speakers and a camcorder.
Larry Lozuk’s Pelican case went through Miami on the
same flight. The lock was cut. Luckily, he had no camera
inside, but only a housing, which arrived intact.
On his way to Dallas, Sam Stanley’s Pelican case went
through Miami on his return from Trinidad. It arrived with the
locks cut, his Nikon F4 missing and the housing left behind.
None of our three bags made it to the baggage carousel. All
were ultimately delivered, although late. All three were Pelican
cases. All three had the locks cut. Cameras were stolen from
two. All three passengers were flying American.
When a bag is lost and customs has to open it outside your
presence, they are required to leave a notice inside the case saying
what they did. None of the three bags had this notice.
If you’re traveling with a Pelican, hand-carry it. Or, put it
inside another case — an old suitcase or duffel, anything that
won’t attract attention.