Mission to find missing AirPods leads to airport worker

Posted:
in General Discussion
One woman was able to locate her missing AirPods in an airport employee's home thanks to the Find My network. Here's what to do if it happens to you.

AirPods Pro
AirPods Pro


Alisabeth Hayden, from Washington state, lost her AirPods earlier this month while leaving an airplane in San Francisco. She realized that they were stolen, according to CNN.

Hayden was separated from the earphones while returning from a trip to Tokyo to see her husband, who is serving in the military.

She left herjacket on her seat in the back of the plane when she disembarked at San Francisco International Airport after a nine-hour flight from Tokyo, feeling lost.

"I realized before I was even off the plane," she says. "I was the third from last off the plane, so I asked the flight attendant if I could go and get it."

"He said no -- I was required by federal law to get off the plane and stand beside it, where the strollers are brought to. I was tired, he said he'd bring it to me, I said OK."

The attendant brought her the jacket, and she boarded her next flight to Seattle. She recalls thinking, "At least I have my AirPods," as a child screamed next to her.

But when she reached into her jacket, the AirPods were missing. The pockets -- which had been buttoned -- were open.

Tracking the AirPods...

Hayden used the in-flight Wi-Fi to follow the headphones using the Find My app, which tracks Apple devices, even though the flight to Seattle had already taken off. At SFO, the AirPods were on display, and they were moving.

"I'm a diligent person, and I tracked the whole way from San Francisco to Seattle, taking screenshots the entire time. I live an hour from Seattle, and once I got home, I was still taking screenshots," she says.

The AirPods eventually appeared on the map in a place called "United Cargo" within the airport on the cargo side, not where a passenger would typically go.

They moved to Terminal 2 and Terminal 3 before traveling along Highway 101, heading south toward San Mateo. They eventually showed up in the Bay Area at what appeared to be a residential location, where they remained for three days.

To answer calls from her husband while he was on deployment over a poor connection, Hayden needed the AirPods. She then started a search to find them.

After discovering the United email format for employees, she emailed every executive she could find worldwide, then marked her AirPods as "lost" in the Find My app. After that, anyone who used them would hear a message telling them they were hers, giving them her phone number.

She says United was "godawful" in their communications with her.

"First they were like, 'I'm sorry you lost your belongings on our flight.' I was like, 'I didn't lose them, I was denied the ability to get my jacket by an employee...and now my $250 AirPods are missing.'"

...and getting them back

Hayden finally received help from a detective from the San Mateo police force working at the airport. He found the address the earbuds were pinging from and matched it to an airport worker's address who was a contractor loading food aboard planes.

Hayden says the detective told her that "the information had been given to United Cargo, and they were going to call this person into the office and question him."

The investigator called her once more a few days later to inform her that the employee had been interrogated. He denied having the AirPods until he was shown the tracking screenshots at his house.

After twelve days, Hayden finally got her AirPods back, although they weren't in good condition. United gave her $271.91 to buy a new pair and 5,000 airline miles as an apology.

The San Francisco Airport Police Department is handling the case and plans to submit it to the San Mateo District Attorney's office.

What to do when you lose your AirPods

Apple's Find My network can help users locate their lost or stolen AirPods. However, users need to enable the feature before they go missing.

Inside the Find My app is a place to set up "left behind" notifications for devices like AirPods. If they go missing, tap the Device tab in the app, find the AirPods in the list, and use the menu to find them on a map or activate the lost mode.

If they are stolen, you should contact your local police department and file a report instead of trying to track them down yourself at a potentially dangerous thief's house.

Read on AppleInsider
marc g

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 10
    macxpressmacxpress Posts: 5,808member
    I'm just amazed how people still to this day try to steal anything Apple branded. They should know it's gonna be locked and/or have tracking on it. How stupid can you be these days. 
    entropysnapoleon_phoneapartmarc gqwerty52watto_cobra
  • Reply 2 of 10
    dewmedewme Posts: 5,356member
    Very nice to hear that she was eventually compensated for her loss. I'm so disappointed to hear that United Airlines treated her so poorly along the way even though they eventually came through. They could have done better. Kudos to the San Mateo PD for devoting time and effort to this case. It always bothered me a little bit when the military would refer to the spouses and family members of service members as "dependents." This woman was anything but a "dependent." She took charge and did all the right things in exactly the right way which greatly enhanced the probability that she would recover her stolen property while still keeping herself and her family safe. Way to go.
    chasmOfermarc gStrangeDaysqwerty52watto_cobra
  • Reply 3 of 10
    sflagelsflagel Posts: 805member
    Why did the airport employee not just reset the AirPods? All he has to do is push a button in the back. Strange case and so much drama for a pair of AirPods….. emailing every executive jeez. 
    9secondkox2uraharawatto_cobra
  • Reply 4 of 10
    9secondkox29secondkox2 Posts: 2,702member
    sflagel said:
    Why did the airport employee not just reset the AirPods? All he has to do is push a button in the back. Strange case and so much drama for a pair of AirPods….. emailing every executive jeez. 
    It’s the principal of the matter. Thieves don’t deserve someone else’s property. They deserve jail. It takes effort to see justice done. Glad this woman didn’t give up. It’s a shame she had to go through all of that. 

    When someone buys something, whether it’s $2.50 or $250, it belongs to its owner and no one should be “allowed” to steal it just because it isn’t more expensive. Such a trash defense of the thief. 
    ronnelijahgchasmneo-techmuthuk_vanalingamrobin hubermarc gStrangeDaysmacguiqwerty52
  • Reply 5 of 10
    amar99amar99 Posts: 181member
    We're lucky to live in an age where this is possible. I remember having a security scanner guy at the airport steal my watch once. Realizing it was missing I came back for it just 2 minutes later. He clearly had it in his hand, but when I told him it was my watch he'd taken, he was like "Oh yeah? What brand is it?" When I told him the brand, he handed it back to me and just sort of laughed and said "shouldn't a done dat, I SHOULDN't a done dat." It's what you get for minimum wage hires I guess.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 6 of 10
    dewmedewme Posts: 5,356member
    amar99 said:
    We're lucky to live in an age where this is possible. I remember having a security scanner guy at the airport steal my watch once. Realizing it was missing I came back for it just 2 minutes later. He clearly had it in his hand, but when I told him it was my watch he'd taken, he was like "Oh yeah? What brand is it?" When I told him the brand, he handed it back to me and just sort of laughed and said "shouldn't a done dat, I SHOULDN't a done dat." It's what you get for minimum wage hires I guess.
    I always place smaller personal items like phones, watches, keys, and wallet inside my backpack in a zippered pocket before I go through the scanner. If the TSA agents insist on opening your backpack they’ll do it in front of you. The only time I’ve ever had an issue with this process was one time where they required a secondary bag inspection because I had an iPad mini in my bag. No big deal.

    Also, I won’t allow my items like backpack and computers, shoes, coat, etc., in a security tray to back up on the belt ahead of the scanner opening before I step through the body scanner or magnetometer. I step through only when I see my stuff go into the scanner opening. Just want to minimize the time my stuff is outside of my direct line of site. When the TSA person running the scanner is actually carefully scrutinizing the stuff going through the scanner, I’m usually on the other side waiting for my stuff to come down the conveyor.

    The smoothest and most convenient way to get through TSA screening is to get TSA PreCheck and for customs Global Entry with biometric scanning if you travel internationally.
    marc gronn
  • Reply 7 of 10
    williamhwilliamh Posts: 1,033member
    Thirty years ago a similar thing happened to me, only it was all the gifts I was bringing my family for Christmas, some CDs, and a portable CD player.  I also noticed just as I got off the plane.  The gifts were not expensive as I didn't have much.  One thing that really bugged me was that I was carrying (and lost) 1 CD from a 4 CD set.  I wrote the record company but never did sort that out.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 8 of 10
    macguimacgui Posts: 2,357member
    sflagel said:
    Why did the airport employee not just reset the AirPods? All he has to do is push a button in the back. Strange case and so much drama for a pair of AirPods….. emailing every executive jeez. 
    You should send her $271.91 since it means so little to you and she can return that amount to United. That would spare everyone "so much drama".
    sflagel said:
    Why did the airport employee not just reset the AirPods? All he has to do is push a button in the back. Strange case and so much drama for a pair of AirPods….. emailing every executive jeez. 
    It’s the principal of the matter. Thieves don’t deserve someone else’s property. They deserve jail. It takes effort to see justice done. Glad this woman didn’t give up. It’s a shame she had to go through all of that. 

    When someone buys something, whether it’s $2.50 or $250, it belongs to its owner and no one should be “allowed” to steal it just because it isn’t more expensive. Such a trash defense of the thief. 
    This and everything in between. There's also the $250 and tax that might not be an insignificant expense to the owner.
    ronnmacxpresswatto_cobra
  • Reply 9 of 10
    macxpressmacxpress Posts: 5,808member
    sflagel said:
    Why did the airport employee not just reset the AirPods? All he has to do is push a button in the back. Strange case and so much drama for a pair of AirPods….. emailing every executive jeez. 
    Well not everyone can afford $250 AirPods so maybe it was a gift and it means a lot to them. Or, maybe they worked their ass off to be able to afford them. Not everyone can afford 10 pairs like you apparently can so missing one is meaningless to you. Regardless, it doesn't belong to them. Another thing that just boggles my mind is the fact that people just can't keep their god damn hands off things that don't belong to them whether its AirPods, laptop, phone, someone's car or their wheels, or even a coffee at Starbucks waiting to be picked up at mobile order. Go out and earn your own shit and stop taking things that others worked hard for. 
    muthuk_vanalingamwatto_cobra
  • Reply 10 of 10
    techridertechrider Posts: 101member
    I take it this means AirPods work similar to an AirTag and leverage other iPhones to update their location to the owner. Does this work even only if the AirPod is in the case, or regardless? I wonder how much battery this feature consumes in a 24hr period.
    edited March 2023 watto_cobra
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