Home | Contact Us | FAQ | Search & Site Map | Link to Us
Sign In | Join | Other 45 Sites in Network
Home
Discussion Groups
Destinations
USA and CanadaEuropeAustralia and NZAsiaLatin AmericaCaribbean IslandsAfrica
Travel Types
Air TravelCruisesRV Travel

Re: Taking medicine out of country?



Tip: Looking for answers? Try searching our database.



You are accessing this site in a read-only mode. For full access to all member benefits, including message posting, please login or register. Registration is completely free, simple, and takes only a few seconds.

Login | Free TravelKB.com registration | Whole discussion thread

The message you are replying to and its parents are listed in the reverse order with the most recent posts first. This might not be the whole discussion thread. To read all the messages in this thread please click here.

Re: Taking medicine out of country?

Bill06 Jul 2009 01:21
>> Yes, yes yes. It's no different than when the sales clerk at Lowe's
>> asks me for an ID when I use the CC to charge a $3 bag of screws. I
[quoted text clipped - 9 lines]
>
> Marsha

Was your card signed? If it isn't, I think they are allowed to
ask for id.

Bill

Marsha06 Jul 2009 00:58
> Yes, yes yes.  It's no different than when the sales clerk at Lowe's
> asks me for an ID when I use the CC to charge a $3 bag of screws.  I
> want to tell them that a gray haired guy like me isn't going to use a
> stolen CC for something like that, but I understand that they're just
> doing what they're told.  Mrs. Nonny is always searched on her scooter
> at the airport, and we understand why.

I believe it's illegal to ask for ID when you use a CC, if the charge
has already been approved.  I refused to show ID at Circuit City once
and they backed down, saying it was only for my protection.  As a
consumer, it's my responsibility to keep track of my CC, not the store.

Marsha

Nonny05 Jul 2009 23:46
>> Yeah, like my elderly mother, God rest her sole.  They pulled
>> her aside
[quoted text clipped - 11 lines]
> the
> people who habitually yell "Profiling" from doing so.

Yes, yes yes.  It's no different than when the sales clerk at
Lowe's asks me for an ID when I use the CC to charge a $3 bag of
screws.  I want to tell them that a gray haired guy like me isn't
going to use a stolen CC for something like that, but I understand
that they're just doing what they're told.  Mrs. Nonny is always
searched on her scooter at the airport, and we understand why.

Signature

Nonny

. . . on a darned diet
and ready to chew off
my own elbows.


Kurt Ullman05 Jul 2009 21:37
> Yeah, like my elderly mother, God rest her sole.  They pulled her aside
> in the airport for a thorough wanding and search, expecting her to stand
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
>
> Marsha

 She was in the CYA category. Those chosen specifically to keep the
people who habitually yell "Profiling" from doing so.

Signature

Searching is half the fun: life is much more manageable when thought
of as a scavenger hunt as opposed to a surprise party.
Jimmy Buffett


Marsha05 Jul 2009 18:12
>> transportation.  I was returning from Jamaica, my hair was long, I had a
>> beard, I wore distressed jeans (faded jeans with strategic rips in
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
>
> The government uses profiles?!?!  I am, simply stunned.

Yeah, like my elderly mother, God rest her sole.  They pulled her aside
in the airport for a thorough wanding and search, expecting her to stand
on one foot while leaning against a post, without letting her sit down
or waiting for her cane to go through x-ray.  She doesn't even resemble
Osama or McVeigh.

Marsha

Lee05 Jul 2009 16:03
>transportation.  I was returning from Jamaica, my hair was long, I had a
>beard, I wore distressed jeans (faded jeans with strategic rips in
>them), and a souvenir Bob Marley T-shirt without any Marijuana
>illustrations on it. Guess I fit some sort of profile.  But saying this
>does not imply that none of you might be randomly searched.

The government uses profiles?!?!  I am, simply stunned.

Signature

- Lee


Brian K04 Jul 2009 06:32
On 7/1/2009 9:12 PM  Rosalie B. while holding "Agent 99", exclaimed:

>  
>>    
[quoted text clipped - 52 lines]
>
>  
On my return from Jamaica to Newark, my carry on was searched. I had all
my Rx in their original bottles.  But I had some OTC stuff in a daily
pill caddy.  I was asked to accompany a guard into an office where I was
questioned by a Fed.  A scraping was taken from each of my OTC pills.  
The scrapings were tested. Only after the results came back negative was
I released. I was given an official apology with the explanation that
they were acting only to stem the tide of drugs entering the US
illegally. I thought about it as I walked towards ground
transportation.  I was returning from Jamaica, my hair was long, I had a
beard, I wore distressed jeans (faded jeans with strategic rips in
them), and a souvenir Bob Marley T-shirt without any Marijuana
illustrations on it. Guess I fit some sort of profile.  But saying this
does not imply that none of you might be randomly searched.

Signature

________
To  email me, Edit "blog" from my email address.
 Brian M. Kochera  
"The poor dog is the firmest friend, the first to welcome the foremost to defend" - Lord Byron
View My Web Page: http://home.earthlink.net/~brian1951


Rosalie B.02 Jul 2009 01:12
>>>> We're going on a road trip to Canada next week.
>>>> We'll have the usual bunch of medicine that those of us  not young
[quoted text clipped - 33 lines]
>Has anyone experienced a challenge, or is the requirement for
>prescription documentation purely hypothetical?

I've never been challenged and we usually have the medicines in a
weekly dispensing box.  I take copies of the prescriptions with me,
but no one has ever asked.

However - I also take a signed notarized statement from both of my
grandchild's parents that I have their permission to be taking their
child out of the country, and only once has anyone even asked about it
and that was when we were changing planes in Heathrow.

My mother was given a hard time when going through Checkpoint Charley
with my daughter in the 70s, but that was then.

Alan Meyer01 Jul 2009 23:31
>>> We're going on a road trip to Canada next week.
>>> We'll have the usual bunch of medicine that those of us  not young
[quoted text clipped - 17 lines]
>
> sue

I can see the logic of this advice, but I'm wondering if anyone
has ever actually been challenged.

My wife and I have traveled all over Europe and South America
as well as Canada and Mexico and never been challenged about
the contents of our medical kits.  We've always had unlabeled
bottles of vitamins and supplements with us.

Coming back to the U.S. we've seen drug sniffing dogs, but I
think they're trained to sniff for specific illegal drugs (we
don't use those!)  The dogs have never had a problem with our
bags.

Has anyone experienced a challenge, or is the requirement for
prescription documentation purely hypothetical?

    Alan

Sue Mullen01 Jul 2009 20:04
>> We're going on a road trip to Canada next week.
>> We'll have the usual bunch of medicine that those of us  not young
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
> a label.  No one ever checks.  I've been to Europe, Asia and Canada
> with them.

PeterL, you just lucked out, this is not good advice.

All medicine should be kept in original containers and this is true for
prescription or OTC meds/supplements.

sue

PeterL01 Jul 2009 19:23
> We're going on a road trip to Canada next week.
> We'll have the usual bunch of medicine that those of us  not young
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>
> Jack.

No need.  I put my pills in little zip lock plastic bag, each one with
a label.  No one ever checks.  I've been to Europe, Asia and Canada
with them.

Jack01 Jul 2009 18:58
We're going on a road trip to Canada next week.
We'll have the usual bunch of medicine that those of us  not young
anymore have.

Should we be sure to have all the bottles the medicine came in or will
the normal pill boxes work?

Thanks

Jack.

Quick links:

 
Sign In
Join
My Latest Posts
My Monitored Threads
My Blog
My Photo Gallery
My Profile
My Homepage




©2010 Advenet LLC   Privacy Policy - Terms of Use
This website includes both content owned or controlled by Advenet as well as content owned or controlled by third parties.