http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/id.9213/pub_detail.asp

 

April 11, 2011


Airport Snafu: Security Easily Compromised by Terror Suspects


 <http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/id.9/author_detail.asp> Jim
Kouri, CPP


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While the TSA now targets almost anyone as a terror suspect, it has allowed
23 dangerous terror suspects to pass through airports without hindrance.

 

"[O]n at least 23 occasions its highly specialized Behavior Detection
Officers failed to stop terrorists from boarding planes, investigators
found. At least 16 people who were later charged or pleaded guilty to
terrorism charges slipped through eight different U.S. airports with SPOT
programs, according to the GAO's findings."

 

On Thursday, U.S. Congress members on the Homeland Security Committee led by
Rep. Peter King (R-NY) obtained an important report from the Government
Accountability Office on aviation security and it proved to be a disturbing
document.

 

The attempted passenger aircraft bombing of Northwest flight 253 on December
25, 2009, provided a vivid reminder that the civil aviation system remains
an attractive terrorist target. 

 

To enhance aviation security, the Department of Homeland Security's
Transportation Security Administration (TSA) began testing its Screening of
Passengers by Observation Techniques (SPOT) program to identify persons who
may pose a risk to aviation security. 

 

The SPOT program utilizes behavior observation and analysis techniques to
identify potentially high-risk passengers. GAO analysts provided Congress
with information on the extent to which TSA has validated the scientific
basis for SPOT and other operational challenges.

 

"Years after implementing a costly passenger screening program, the Homeland
Security agency responsible for protecting the nation's transportation
system failed to detect terrorists at U.S. airports on nearly two dozen
occasions," according to Tom Fitton, President of Judicial Watch. 

 

As a result the terrorists slipped right through "security" checkpoints and
boarded commercial airplanes, according to the GAO report that's difficult
to swallow nearly a decade after the worst terrorist attacks in U.S.
history. 

 

Unfortunately, it's true and, not surprisingly, it involves the
Transportation Security Administration (TSA), which was created after 9/11
mainly to prevent terrorists from using planes as weapons of mass
destruction.

 

The agency's perpetual blunders have been well documented by Judicial Watch
over the years, but this seems to be the icing on the cake for an agency
with unlimited resources and unconditional support from Congress and the
White House. A heavily-touted and quite expensive TSA program that targets
terrorists by observing their behavior has failed miserably, according to a
congressional probe conducted by the Government Accountability Office.

 

Known as Screening of Passengers by Observation Techniques (SPOT), the
innovative project was implemented with great fanfare to enhance aviation
security after Islamic terrorist slammed commercial jets into the World
Trade Center and Pentagon. In 2010 SPOT cost taxpayers nearly $212 million
and the Obama Administration wants $232 million for it this year.

 

But on at least 23 occasions its highly specialized Behavior Detection
Officers failed to stop terrorists from boarding planes, investigators
found. At least 16 people who were later charged or pleaded guilty to
terrorism charges slipped through eight different U.S. airports with SPOT
programs, according to the GAO's findings.

 

It gets better. Most of the airports where terrorists boarded planes rank
among the top 10 highest risk on the TSA's Airport Threat Assessment list.
For instance, an individual who subsequently pleaded guilty to providing
material support to Somali terrorists boarded a plane at the
Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport en route to Somalia and another
who later admitted providing Al Qaeda with material support took a plane at
Newark Liberty International Airport to participate in a terrorist training
camp in Pakistan.

 

Before pouring more taxpayer dollars into this dubious security program
perhaps the Obama Administration should consider a point made by
congressional investigators in their report; "the TSA deployed its behavior
detection program nationwide before first determining whether there was a
scientifically valid basis for the program." 

 

 <http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/> FamilySecurityMatters.org
Contributing
<http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/id.9/author_detail.asp> Jim
Kouri, CPP is currently fifth vice-president of the National Association of
Chiefs of Police and he's a columnist for The Examiner (
<http://examiner.com/> examiner.com) and New Media Alliance (
<http://thenma.org/> thenma.org).  In addition, he's a blogger for the
Cheyenne, Wyoming Fox News KGAB ( <http://www.kgab.com/> www.kgab.com). Jim
Kouri also serves as political advisor for Emmy and Golden Globe actor
Michael Moriarty.

 



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