NEW
YORK, April 3 They can see through your clothes and tell exactly
who you are just by glancing in your eyes. Some can even smell you.
Since Sept. 11, a new breed of high-tech security devices has been
rushed to market, and they could be coming soon to an airport near
you. But the various new technologies are sure to run into turbulence
along the way, as the flying public decides just how much its
willing to pay literally and figuratively to feel safe
again.
IN AN ATTEMPT to help screeners stop
potential terrorists in their tracks, the U.S. government and a
handful of airports across the country are testing new contraptions
and biometrics systems reminiscent of The Jetsons that
can identify passengers by unique physical traits like a fingerprint
or an iris pattern. Much to the chagrin of civil libertarians, it
no longer seems a question of whether new cutting-edge equipment
will be deployed, but when. With $50 million a year earmarked for
the development of advanced technology, the Transportation Security
Agency, or TSA, the month-old federal agency now in charge of all
the nations airport checkpoints, is shopping around. Congress
is opening its checkbook, says Tom Jensen, president and CEO
of the National Safe Skies Alliance, a nonprofit group that tests
new aviation security devices and prototypes. But one of our
main concerns is that they dont spend the money on stuff that
doesnt work.
To avoid bad choices by lawmakers eager to allay the publics
current fear of flying, the TSA has asked Safe Skies for help. Now,
at Orlando International Airport in Florida, passengers can volunteer
to go through security procedures designed to test a series of new
devices the government might consider investing in.
'Virtual strip search'
One of the most controversial items is
Rapiscans Secure 1000 body scanner, a low-energy X-ray that
goes beyond todays metal detectors by beaming through a passengers
clothes to reveal the outline of foreign objects next to their skin.
It can detect metal, as well as anything inorganic from a
ceramic gun to plastic explosives. But it also sees other shapes,
including the general outline of the body and genitalia.
This, of course, is a virtual strip-search, says ACLU
associate director Barry Steinhardt. Theres no question
this has tremendous potential for embarrassment.
But the machines makers, as well as those who have tested
the Secure 1000 independently, say the strip-search comparison has
been overblown. According to Jenson, the X-rays images of
peoples more private parts are blurry at best. Plus, the screeners,
who are male for men and female for women, sit behind a wall and
dont even see the passenger theyre viewing in person
unless they detect something suspicious. Finally, only certain passengers
chosen either at random, or because something about their
demeanor or appearance concerns a screener would be asked
to have the scan in the first place.
Knowing what I know about it, says Jenson, Id
say X-ray me and let me go on my way. With the ACLU,
its always react first and then find out what it does later.
Hands off
Bryan Allman, the project manager for
Rapiscans body scanner, says some travelers may prefer the
machine over current inspection methods. I fly like everyone
else, he says. And I dont enjoy being hand frisked
at airports. This is much less intrusive in my opinion, because
nobody touches you.
The machines emit radiation, but the levels are so low that there
are said to be no medical concerns.
The federal Immigration and Naturalization Service already uses
body scanners, but given the sensitive nature of what they can see,
their widespread use could still be a few years away, experts say.
Another device being tested, the phone
booth-sized Barringer Ionscan 400, blows jets of air at passengers.
Because heat rises, microscopic particles float into overhead sensors,
which then sniff the air to detect any trace of explosives.
As an added bonus for law enforcement officials, the Ionscan also
can be adjusted to test for 60 types of drug residue, which worries
civil liberties advocates like Steinhardt, who says, Do we
really want to turn airport security personnel into the DEA?"
Even the less controversial devices being
considered by the government would give screeners a real leg up, experts
say. A bottle scanner in the Orlando experiment, for example, can
determine what kind of substance is in a sealed container. And a dual-image
X-ray looks at bags from two directions simultaneously. In one
dimension, a knife just looks like a line, says Jenson, but
another view would show the flat side of the blade, making screeners
jobs much quicker and easier.
Biometrics is the key
Aviation insiders agree, however, that
deploying all of these high-tech gadgets together would be too expensive,
clunky and time consuming unless they were combined with
biometrics ID cards that would identify pre-screened passengers.
You need to take the low-risk people and get them through
the system quickly, so you can focus your efforts on the higher-risk
people, says the Progressive Policy Institutes Robert
Atkinson, a leading proponent of whats become known as the
trusted traveler card.
Proposed as a voluntary system, fliers would be granted a card only
after an initial background check using computers linked to FBI
and INS databases. Then, at airline check-in gates, theyd
be asked a la Star Trek to put a finger on a scanner,
or look into an eyepiece to prove they were indeed the person they
claimed they were. So-called trusted travelers would
go through the standard security checks, but they would not be subjected
to time-consuming random searches and additional screening machines.
Identifying 'bad actors'
Advocates say the background check would
be much like a routine credit report, and might examine things like
a passengers residential and flying history.
In Israel, often held up as the gold standard for airport security,
a biometric program for passengers already exists. Over the past
three years, 85,000 Israelis have signed up for the Express Entry
system, which allows them to speed through security and immigration
at special electronic kiosks where they simply insert their cards
and put their hands on a special reader.
Biometrics has reduced plane-to-curb time at Ben Gurion from
about two hours per passenger to 15 minutes, says Bret Kidd,
a vice president at Electronic Data Systems, which manages Express
Entry. Physical security should always be there, of course,
but you also need to identify the bad actors, and biometrics helps
expedite the process for those who opt in.

Kidd believes that systems like its latest
version of Express Entry, unveiled at the most recent COMDEX technology
conference in Chicago, will ultimately be used in the United States.
The thought until now was that if were going to increase
security, well have to decrease convenience and efficiency,
says Kidd. What were saying is that with biometrics,
thats simply not the case.
Avoiding another 9/11
The ACLU has consistently opposed the
idea of biometric cards even if they are voluntary
because of privacy concerns and fears that they might be granted
unfairly based on racial profiling. But Atkinson, who wrote the
congressional policy paper How Technology Can Help Make Air
Travel Safe Again, insists that integrating biometrics at
all levels of airport security may be the only way to prevent more
attacks like the ones on Sept. 11. Four out of the five hijackers
on the Dulles flight were on phony drivers licenses,
says Atkinson. So, when were talking about people driving
planes into buildings, fairness and privacy
shouldnt be the ultimate criteria.
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