DALLAS (AP) – Charles D. McKinley had himself shipped from New York to Dallas in an airline cargo crate, startling his parents – and a deliveryman – when he broke out of the box outside their home.

“My husband asked him, “Man, what are you doing in this crate?’ He said he was coming home,” his mother told KDFW-TV in Dallas.

Federal officials want to know how the stowaway bypassed airport security. And members of Congress repeated their call for cargo screening.

McKinley, 25, a shipping clerk from New York, was arrested and jailed on unrelated bad-check and traffic charges after his overnight odyssey. Federal officials are considering additional charges of stowing away on a plane.

In a rambling jailhouse interview, McKinley told KXAS-TV in Dallas that he made the trip because he was homesick and a friend thought he could save money by flying as cargo. McKinley said he took no food or water on the 15-hour journey, just a cell phone, which did not work.

“I’m sitting there thinking, “Oh God, I don’t know why I’m doing this,”‘ he said. “I’m sitting there thinking like any minute somebody will notice that there’s somebody sitting inside this crate. … No one did.”

Before setting out, McKinley filled out shipping instructions saying the crate held a computer and clothes. Authorities believe he had help from at least one co-worker at the warehouse where he works in New York when he loaded himself in the box.

The box was taken by truck from New York’s Kennedy Airport to New Jersey. Then it was loaded onto a pressurized, heated cargo plane operated by Kitty Hawk Cargo. It flew from Newark, N.J., to Niagara Falls, N.Y., then to the carrier’s hub in Fort Wayne, Ind., and on to Dallas, the FBI said.

On Saturday, Billy Ray Thomas, a driver for Pilot Air Freight, picked up the crate at Dallas-Fort Worth Airport and delivered it to McKinley’s parents’ home in suburban DeSoto.

When Thomas went to unload the 350-pound crate from his truck, he saw a pair of eyes and thought there was a body inside.

Then McKinley broke the box open and crawled out, said police Lt. Brian Windham.

McKinley’s mother was stunned. The delivery driver called police.

DeSoto police said the crate measured 42 by 36 by 15 inches. McKinley stands 5-foot-8 and weighs 170 pounds, authorities said.

Authorities said they did not know whether McKinley had any toilet facilities. But the stowaway told the TV station that got out of the crate during flights once or twice and walked around.

His box was carried in the pressurized, heated cabins, but could just as easily have been placed in the lower, unpressurized holds, said Richard G. Phillips, chief executive of Pilot Air Freight.

“He could easily have died,” Phillips said.

The freight cost – billed to McKinley’s employer – was $550. At that rate, “he could have flown first-class,” Phillips said.

The incident has raised new concerns about the security of the nation’s cargo system.

“Today it was just a guy trying to fly cheaply from New York to Dallas to visit his parents, but in the future a member of al-Qaida could have himself packed into an air cargo container,” said Rep. Edward Markey, D-Mass. “We have to take steps now to insure that the next al-Qaida terrorist doesn’t fly next day air.”

Markey and Rep. Christopher Shays, R-Conn., gained House approval of an amendment requiring that cargo be screened, but it may not survive the conference committee with the Senate.

“People aren’t paying as much attention to this as they should,” said Shays.

Investigators from the federal Transportation Security Administration interviewed McKinley twice to learn how he got past security.

“We’re not aware this has happened previously, so obviously it’s something we are investigating aggressively,” TSA spokeswoman Suzanne Luber said.

Air cargo receives less federal security attention than passenger planes, in part because of its sheer volume, and critics have suggested that terrorists could use cargo flights as weapons.

Other than the federal statute, District Attorney Bill Hill said he could not cite any law that McKinley broke.

“He violated the law of stupidity if nothing else,” Hill said.

AP-ES-09-09-03 1844EDT



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