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Airport scans' 'vulnerabilities' ID'd – TSA mum

Bob Unruh - WND

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May 7, 2012

The summary of a classified report about the Transportation Security Administration’s invasive body scans at airports admits “vulnerabilities,” and now the Electronic Privacy Information Center is in court pressing to make the findings public.

“The unclassified summary of the report notes that several vulnerabilities were found in the program, which has already cost more than $87 million,” according to the EPIC.

But EPIC noted that the full report is not being released to the public, because it contains “Sensitive Security Information.” EPIC is challenging that designation in pursuit of the information.

The enhanced security program has been mired in controversy since about two years ago when the federal government started installing upgraded X-ray machines to scan through passengers’ clothes to determine whether they are carrying weapons or explosives.

The alternative to the scans, which can produce virtually nude images of passengers, is a full-body pat-down by TSA agents. Several passengers have gone to court, claiming the pat-downs essentially are a physical sexual assault in public.

The summary of the report from the office of Inspector General for the Department of Homeland Security said, “We identified vulnerabilities in the screening process at the passenger screening checkpoint at the domestic airports where we conducted testing.”

It continued: “As a result of our testing, we made eight recommendations and TSA concurred with all the recommendations. When fully implemented, these recommendations should strengthen the overall effectiveness of the screening process at the passenger screening checkpoint.”

The report said, however, that “the names of airports tested, and the quantitative and qualitative results of our testing are classified, or designated as Sensitive Security Information. We have shared the information with the Department, the TSA, and appropriate congressional committees.”

EPIC has challenged the SSI designation, arguing “that it is an improper standard for classification.”

“The Government Accountability Office, technical experts, members of Congress and bloggers have also questioned the effectiveness of the devices,” the organization reported.

In its own federal lawsuit, which has been pending for months, EPIC challenges the body scanner program, calling it “invasive, unlawful, and ineffective.”

EPIC is “seeking repeal of the TSA’s ‘rule mandating the use of body scanners at airport checkpoints as primary screening.’”

The action calls the scanners invasive, ineffective and illegal.

Recent TSA incidents have included officers giving a pat-down to a 7-year-old girl with cerebral palsy, patting down a 4-year-old, letting drugs through in exchange for cash and stealing iPads.

In one case, an appeals court affirmed a ruling from Judge Henry H. Kennedy Jr., who cited a “secret” order from the TSA rejecting claims by passengers and pilots that such scanning violated their rights.

The government, insisting that the “secret” order contains “sensitive security information,” has refused to make public the document outlining the procedures, according to John Whitehead, president of the Rutherford Institute.

Institute attorneys had argued that since the TSA “order” has remained “secret,” there has been no opportunity for the public to comment on it, and “passengers and pilots are not only being deprived of their Fourth Amendment rights, but also their due process right to a fair hearing on their challenge to the secret TSA policy.”

Whitehead said the ruling is a dark cloud.

“This ruling does not bode well for attempts to ensure transparency in government or efforts to safeguard Americans against virtual strip searches and other excessive groping of our bodies by government agents, especially when there’s no suspicion of wrongdoing,” he said.

“When civil liberties are tossed out the window – by government agents or by the courts – we all lose. No American should be forced to undergo a virtual strip search or be subjected to such excessive groping of the body as a matter of course in reporting to work or boarding an airplane when there is no suspicion of wrongdoing,” he said.

Whitehead noted it was the D.C. Court of Appeals that rejected an appeal on behalf of airline pilots and passengers who refused to submit to virtual strip searches – or highly invasive pat-down searches.

Institute attorneys wanted to reverse district court judgments in Fourth Amendment lawsuits filed in 2010 against Janet Napolitano, secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, and John Pistole, administrator of the Transportation Security Administration, challenging the constitutionality of the TSA’s airport security screening policy.

The cases were brought in 2010 on behalf of Adrienne Durso, a recent breast cancer survivor. She repeatedly and aggressively was groped by TSA agents in the area where she had undergone a mastectomy, even after informing agents of her condition.

Another plaintiff was Chris Daniels, a frequent business traveler who was aggressively and repeatedly touched in his genital area after initial screening showed an abnormality in his genitals that was the result of a childhood injury. Whitehead reported when Daniels asked to leave the security area and forgo flying rather than submit to the intimate groping, he was told that he was not free to leave and would have to submit to the enhanced pat-down.

“The pilots, Michael Roberts and Ann Poe, in two separate incidents taking place in 2010, were on their way to work when told by TSA screeners they must submit to whole-body scanning or be subjected to a full pat-down frisk. Upon refusing, both pilots were prevented from passing through security and unable to report to work on the days in question,” the Rutherford report said.

The case cited the Constitution’s Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable searches and seizures.

Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, earlier proposed a change in the law that would specify that screeners are “not immune from any U.S. law regarding physical contact with another person, making images of another person, or causing physical harm through the use of radiation-emitting machinery on another person.”

“It means they are not above the laws the rest of us must obey,” he wrote at the time.

Also, the Libertarian Party of Florida formally has asked sheriffs across the state to start arresting TSA agents in the 67 counties for sexual battery.

“As sheriff, you have the absolute duty to enforce the law uniformly and without prejudice. You are, at best, engaged in selective enforcement by choosing to further ignore these flagrant violations of federal and state law. At worst, you are complicit,” said a message to the 67 sheriffs from the party signed by chairman Adrian Wyllie.

“If you have TSA agents within your county that are violating the law, then you must act. Warn the TSA agents that they are subject to arrest if they continue to violate the law. Should they continue, then you must begin making arrests,” the letter said. “We urge you to remember the oath you took to support, protect and defend the Constitution of both the state of Florida and the United States of America. On behalf of all Floridians, the Libertarian Party of Florida calls on you to do exactly that.”

On the state level, Texas fell narrowly short of moving forward with a bill that would have required “probable cause” for agents to act against a passenger. While the plan was under consideration, the federal government threatened to close down air traffic to and from the state.

U.S. Attorney John E. Murphy asserted that federal agents must be allowed to touch people when and how they want.

“The proposed [Texas] legislation would make it unlawful for a federal agent such as a TSO to perform certain specified searches for the purpose of granting access to a publicly accessible building or form of transportation,” he told Texans at the time. “That provision would thus criminalize searches that are required under federal regulations in order to ensure the safety of the American public.”

Perhaps among the most dramatic expressions of concern came from Miss USA Susie Castillo, who was reduced to tears by federal agents ensuring she was not a terrorist.

Castillo produced a viral video describing her experience at the Dallas-Fort Worth Airport.

“I mean, she actually… touched my vagina,” Castillo said through her tears. “They’re making me … choose to either get molested … or go through this machine that’s completely unhealthy and dangerous. I don’t want to go through it, and here I am crying.”

In a commentary at the Tenth Amendment Center by Connor Boyack with Brian Roberts and Michael Boldin, the organization supported plans to address the traveling public’s concerns.

“Castillo isn’t the only person who would be protected under this Texas legislation. All other innocent travelers would likewise be shielded. That includes the six year old girl who made the headlines last month for being groped by a TSA agent (an action which the TSA defended as being alright since it ‘followed the current standard operating procedures’), as well as the eight-month-old infant subjected to a pat down while cradled in the arms of her mother.”

http://www.wnd.com/2012/05/classified-report-reveals-vulnerabilities-in-airport-scans/print/