KTLA

Ex-TSA agent gets nearly 6 years in federal prison for trying to smuggle meth into LAX

FILE - Transportation Security Administration agents process passengers at the south security checkpoint at Denver International Airport in Denver on June 10, 2020. The chief of the TSA said Tuesday, May 10, 2022, that his agency has quadrupled the number of employees who could bolster screening operations at airports that become too crowded this summer. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski, File)

A Hawthorne man who worked as a Transportation Security Officer at Los Angeles International Airport was sentenced to almost six years in federal prison for smuggling what he thought was methamphetamine through airport security.

Michael Williams, 39, was the subject of an undercover operation in 2020, and on June 10, he pleaded guilty to attempted distribution of methamphetamine.


TSA officers have unscreened access to LAX, and Williams used that ability to meet with a “drug source” several times to discuss his carrying of meth into the airport in exchange for $8,000, the U.S. Department of Justice said in a news release.

After entering the airport, Williams twice met who he thought was accomplice (it was actually an undercover federal agent) in the bathroom beyond the security screening area to hand off the backpack containing fake drugs. On both occasions, he received $4,000 in cash from the agent.

“It is critical to national security that the government agents who are charged with keeping our nation safe do not sell their access to criminals,” prosecutors wrote in a sentencing memorandum.