(c/o DS)

http://bostonherald.com/business/general/view.bg?articleid=1291536

National rollout of invasive pat-downs this week

By Donna Goodison
Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Airline passengers nationwide will be subjected to new aggressive and 
controversial body searches likened to “foreplay” pat-downs under the expansion 
of a program tested at Logan International Airport.

Beginning Friday, the Transportation Security Administration will start using 
the new front-of-the-hand, slide-down screening technique for passengers at all 
450 of the nation’s commercial airports.

The more invasive pat-downs - which include over-the-clothes searches of 
passengers’ breast and genital areas - have raised privacy issues among civil 
liberties advocates. TSA screeners previously used pat-down hand motions to 
search passengers, switching to the backs of their hands when covering 
sensitive areas such as the torso.

As first reported by the Herald in August, the TSA implemented the new 
body-search procedures at Logan and Las Vegas-McCarran International Airport 
because they were using the largest number of walk-through full-body scanners 
at security checkpoints. Also controversial, the scanners use low-dose X-rays 
to produce two-sided, head-to-toe images of passengers’ bodies - including 
discernible but indistinct images of private parts - while blurring facial 
features.

The TSA declined comment on the national rollout date, but two sources 
confirmed it. The pat-down techniques will be included in the TSA’s new set of 
standard operating procedures for screening issued Friday.

Passengers who opt not to walk through the full-body scanners are subject to 
the searches, as well as passengers who set off metal detectors at checkpoints 
without the scanners. The TSA also picks random passengers for the searches.

Lots of airline passengers are in for a surprise, said Chris Ott, spokesman for 
the American Civil Liberties Union of Massachusetts, which assailed the new 
pat-downs when they started at Logan.

“We question the effectiveness of the methods that are being presented and the 
choice that travelers are being given,” he said. “. . . Travelers are being 
asked to choose between being scanned ‘naked’ and exposed to radiation, or 
getting what people are describing as just a highly invasive search by hands of 
their entire bodies.”

Kate Hinni, founder of the non-profit FlyersRights.org consumer group, said the 
new searches amount to a “foreplay pat-down” that for many people is going to 
“feel like a moral issue.”

“It’s like having to choose the lesser of two evils,” Hinni said. “Both are 
horribly invasive.”
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