Smoke bomb, hand grenade intercepted by TSA at Pittsburgh airport

TSA agents at Pittsburgh International Airport confiscated a smoke bomb and a hand grenade from two separate passengers going through recent checkpoints. 

According to TSA post on X, formerly Twitter, the smoke grenade was intercepted on Wednesday. 

"Had it been triggered, thick yellow smoke would have been everywhere!" a TSA spokesperson said on X. "Yellow is just not a good look. And besides, you know that there's no smoking on a plane!"

The same day, another passenger tried to carry on an inert hand grenade, which wouldn’t have exploded, but is still banned from planes. 

"Most people plan on having a blast on their trip, but this guy wasn't thinking along those lines when TSA officers intercepted this grenade," a TSA spokesperson said. "Fortunately it was inert, however grenades, live or inert are not allowed on planes."

TSA checkpoints will be busier in coming months as summer travel season heats up. 

The number of travelers going through U.S. airport checkpoints in 2023 was up 12.4% over the year before, and 1.4% higher than in 2019, according to the Transportation Security Administration.

RELATED: Here are the US airports that are the worst to fly out of — see the list

According to a report from AirHelp, Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport is the worst airport for flight disruptions, while Salt Lake City International Airport was ranked the best for travelers. 

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