Local Police Want Right to Jam Wireless Signals

By Spencer S. Hsu
Washington Post Staff Writer

Sunday, February 1, 2009; A02

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/01/31/AR2009013101548_pf.html


As President Obama's motorcade rolled down Pennsylvania Avenue on 
Inauguration Day, federal authorities deployed a closely held law 
enforcement tool: equipment that can jam cellphones and other wireless 
devices to foil remote-controlled bombs, sources said.

It is an increasingly common technology, with federal agencies expanding 
its use as state and local agencies are pushing for permission to do the 
same. Police and others say it could stop terrorists from coordinating 
during an attack, prevent suspects from erasing evidence on wireless 
devices, simplify arrests and keep inmates from using contraband phones.

But jamming remains strictly illegal for state and local agencies. 
Federal officials barely acknowledge that they use it inside the United 
States, and the few federal agencies that can jam signals usually must 
seek a legal waiver first.

The quest to expand the technology has invigorated a debate about how 
widely jamming should be allowed and whether its value as a common 
crime-fighting strategy outweighs its downsides, including restricting 
the constant access to the airwaves that Americans have come to expect.

"Jamming is a blunt instrument," said Joe Farren, vice president of 
government affairs for the Cellular Telecommunications Industry 
Association. He and others pointed out that when authorities disable 
wireless service, whether during a terrorist attack or inside a prison, 
that action can also stop the calls that could help in an emergency. 
During November's raids in Mumbai, for example, citizens relied on 
cellphones to direct police to the assailants.

Propelled by the military's experience with roadside bombs in Iraq and 
Afghanistan, jamming technology has evolved to counter bombs triggered 
by cellphones, garage openers, remote controls for toy cars or other 
devices that emit radio signals. Federal authorities rank improvised 
bombs, which are cheap and adaptable, as one of the greatest terrorist 
threats to the West.

On Inauguration Day, federal authorities were authorized to jam signals 
at some locations in downtown Washington, according to current and 
former federal officials. The Secret Service and other officials 
declined to provide specific details, some of which are classified.

Most of the nearly 2 million people attending the swearing-in and along 
the parade route would have been oblivious to any unusual disruption.

"Chances are, you wouldn't even notice it was there," said Howard 
Melamed, an executive with CellAntenna Corp., a small Coral Springs, 
Fla., company that produces jamming equipment. If someone in the crowd 
was on a call, they might have confused the jamming with a dropped 
signal. "Your phone may go off network," he said. In other cases, "it 
may never signal, if it's a quick interruption."

Industry officials said that radio-jammers work in several ways: They 
can send a barrage of energy that drowns out signals across multiple 
bands or produce a surge of energy on a particular frequency. In other 
instances, the devices detect and disrupt a suspicious signal, a 
technique known as "scan and jam."

Some private citizens, hoping to eliminate cellphone calls in 
restaurants, churches or theaters, have tapped into an underground 
market of jamming equipment that has trickled into the United States. 
But that, too, is illegal under the 70-year-old federal 
telecommunications act, which bans jamming commercial radio signals. The 
Federal Communications Commission has begun to crack down on private 
use, which is punishable by an $11,000 fine.

The U.S. military is capable of shutting down communications across a 
wide area and has done so overseas, including when it has conducted 
raids to capture suspects. To counter explosives, devices can be set to 
jam signals for a distance of 50 to 500 meters, for example, or enough 
to allow a car to pass out of the blast zone of a small bomb.

Some federal agencies, including the FBI and the Secret Service, have 
standing authority to use jamming equipment or can request waivers from 
the National Telecommunications and Information Administration, a 
Commerce Department agency, when there is an imminent threat, a federal 
official said.

Jamming has been approved in the past for major events, ranging from 
State of the Union addresses to visits by certain foreign dignitaries, 
according to a federal official who spoke on the condition of anonymity 
because he was not authorized to talk about the subject.

After transit bombings in Europe, the Department of Homeland Security 
reached an agreement in 2006 under the National Communications System 
with cellphone companies to voluntarily shut down service under certain 
circumstances, which could disable signals for areas ranging from a 
tunnel to an entire metropolitan region, a DHS official said.

Much of the controversy has been fueled by the growing demands from 
state and local governments.

In the District, corrections officials won permission from the FCC for a 
brief test of jamming technology at the D.C. jail last month, after 
citing the "alarming rate" of contraband phones being seized at prisons 
around the country.

"Cell phones are used by inmates to engage in highly pernicious behavior 
such as the intimidation of witnesses, coordination of escapes, and the 
conducting of criminal enterprises," D.C. corrections chief Devon Brown 
wrote to the federal agency.

The test has been put on hold because of a legal challenge, but the city 
will keep seeking permission, said D.C. Attorney General Peter J. Nickles.

Texas prison officials made a similar request last fall after a death 
row inmate placed an illicit call threatening a state legislator, and 
South Carolina corrections officials said their department staged a test 
without permission in November.

In a pilot project, the FBI deputized about 10 local bomb squads across 
the country in 2007 so they could use a small number of radio jammers 
similar to the military equipment used overseas.

The local pleas for expanded permission are beginning to get a friendly 
reception on Capitol Hill. Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman (I-Conn.), chairman 
of the Senate homeland security committee, plans to introduce 
legislation that would give law enforcement agencies "the tools they 
need to selectively jam" communications in the event of a terrorist 
attack, a spokeswoman said.

Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (Tex.), the ranking Republican on the Senate 
Commerce Committee, has introduced a bill that would allow the U.S. 
Bureau of Prisons and governors to seek waivers from the FCC to jam 
calling at prisons.

"When lives are at stake, law enforcement needs to find ways to disrupt 
cellphones and other communications in a pinpointed way against 
terrorists who are using them," New York City Police Commissioner 
Raymond F. Kelly told a Senate panel Jan. 8. He also cited the Mumbai 
terrorist attacks, when hostage-takers used media spotters and satellite 
and mobile phones to help them outmaneuver police at hotels, train 
stations and other targets.

Backing up such requests are the commercial interests that could provide 
the jammers.

Melamed, with CellAntenna, has worked for several years to open what the 
company forecasts could be a $25 million line of domestic jamming 
business for itself, and the amount could be more for bigger players 
such as Tyco and Harris Corp. He said rules that prevent government 
agencies from blocking signals don't make sense.

"We're still trying to figure out how it's in the best interest of the 
public to prevent bomb squads from keeping bombs from blowing up and 
killing people," he said.

But the cellular industry trade group warns that letting the nation's 
18,000 state and local law enforcement agencies decide when and where to 
jam phone calls would create a messy patchwork of potential service 
disruptions.

Critics warn of another potential problem, "friendly fire," when one 
agency inadvertently jams another's access to the airwaves, posing a 
safety hazard in an emergency. Farren said there are "smarter, better 
and safer alternatives," such as stopping inmates from getting smuggled 
cellphones in the first place or pinpointing signals from unauthorized 
callers.

Still, analysts said, events such as the Mumbai attacks may tip the 
debate in favor of law enforcement.

"Without something like Mumbai, the national security and public safety 
cases would not be as compelling," said James E. Katz, director of the 
Center for Mobile Communication Studies at Rutgers University. "Now, the 
burden of proof has been shifting to people who don't want these 
exceptions, rather than the people who do."

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204 
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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