How intrusive is airport security these days? For ten or eleven male passengers, normal TSA screening protocol was so indistinguishable from a predatory stranger arbitrarily groping their genitals that none of them even complained when that happened.

An anonymous airport worker exposed the story on November 18, 2014, telling TSA that a named male security screener at Denver International Airport was groping the genitals of multiple male passengers. Police later described the alleged scheme: "When a male he finds attractive comes to be screened by the scanning machine he will alert another TSA screener to indicate to the scanning computer that the party being screened is a female. When the screener does this, the scanning machine will indicate an anomaly in the genital area and this allows him to conduct a pat-down search of that area.” After the tip more than two months passed.

The screener said to be groping passengers was still employed by TSA. Finally, on February 9, 2015, a TSA official sent to investigate says that he caught the screener in the act and questioned his accomplice, who admitted to helping him on ten prior occasions. Both of the TSA employees were fired. Denver police were informed about a possible sex crime, but a prosecutor declined to file charges in part because TSA declared that it was unable to identify the victim of the groping. They knew only that he was a Southwest Airlines passenger. TSA says that no other passengers filed a complaint about being groped by this screener. Though they were innocent men passing through airport security with nothing in their pants save their genitals, they apparently couldn't tell anything was amiss.