Ex-TSA screener gets 90 days
By Melissa Tanji
Maui News
WAILUKU — A 30-year-old former Transportation Security Administration worker has been sentenced to 90 days in jail and five years of probation for stealing jewelry, gift cards and other items from tourists' luggage as they were screened at Kahului Airport.
Devie Darla Dale Feig, a single mother of five children, also was ordered to pay $945.39 in restitution, which she will pay to TSA. The agency already has reimbursed the victims.
Second Circuit Judge Joseph Cardoza followed a plea agreement in sentencing Feig this week.
To allow Feig to take care of her children and continue working, Cardoza ordered she spend two days in jail for each of 45 weeks, with the term beginning Monday.
"I'm not a bad person. But what I did was wrong. I wanted to say I'm sorry," Feig said.
Cardoza told Feig people do make big mistakes but they have to learn from them.
He said she has to be a good example for her children and pay her debt to society.
Deputy Prosecutor Terence Herndon called the case egregious and asked that Feig receive the full 90-day jail term.
"I believe a strong message needs to be sent that this behavior will not be tolerated," he said.
Herndon said when Feig was caught, she told police that the practice was going on for a year, and it was easy for her to steal.
Deputy Public Defender Adriel Menor asked that Feig be given no jail time and said probation would be sufficient.
He said Feig knew there would be impact beyond her actions.
Feig pleaded no contest to two counts of second-degree theft for two separate incidents, one on March 30 and the other on Jan. 17, both in 2007.
According to court records, one of the victims, a teacher from Missouri, had items including a checkbook, house key and three Kohl's gift cards stolen from her luggage.
She later tracked the gift cards and found they were used by Feig to purchase items over the Internet, and the items were shipped to a Kahului address.
Police also found Feig with jewelry that was taken from a North Dakota woman's suitcase.
The thefts occurred as luggage was being screened behind the airline counters, records show.