Badge used by Federal Air Marshal Gerald E. Casey of the Seattle Field Office beginning in 2002. Badge # 1284. The design, which features the FAA seal, continued to be used by the Air Marshals even though the service was transferred to the Transportation Security Administration in 2002.
This original TSA seal, displayed at TSA headquarters in 2002, depicts a soaring bald eagle in front of a flag with nine stars and eleven stripes commemorating the attacks of 9/11.
This is a typical outfit for a Federal Air Marshal in training. These T-shirts were worn by Federal Air Marshal Bill McCracken in 2002 as he was undergoing his initial FAMS training.
This red plastic training gun allows trainees who have never carried a firearm before to get familiar with the weight and feel of carrying a weapon. They are far cheaper than a real pistol and they don’t break in training. Their red color indicates that it is a training weapon and not a real gun.