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by lotharbot
3831 days ago
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> "I do know that people are held responsible for the personal belongings they carry" Actually there's strong legal precedent in the opposite direction. From page 14 of [0], "a defendant cannot knowingly acquire or possess that which he or she does not know exists". This sentiment is common in US law -- you can claim to not know how something got into your possession, and if that claim is reasonably credible, you'll typically be let off the hook. [0] http://www.nycourts.gov/ctapps/Decisions/2012/May12/70opn12.... |
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I read the above line several times carefully.
Here is the meaning I made out of that sentence, one cannot claim that they knew exactly how they got a certain object and then say at a later time that they did not even know such an object exists.
This is a different scenario than accepting responsibility for your personal belongings (say while flying) and then claiming that you don't know how it got there.
In the former case there is evidence that you got that object.
To summarize, my understanding of in flight carry on rules are you are aware of the things you are carrying and would be held responsible if you are later caught with a prohibited item.