
Airport Snoop System Thrown In $102m Garbage Can
By Ashlee Vance in Chicago
On Wednesday, Ridge joked about a dagger going through the heart of CAPPS II, but his agency scrambled to put a better spin on things by Thursday. The Homeland defenders are now saying they expect to roll out a new automated screening system. They just don't know what this system will look like, how much it will cost or when it will be ready.
The Feds are basically trying to update old identification systems. They want to look out for customers buying airline tickets in cash, making last minute purchases and with dubious records. Now, however, they might have to resort to a system that simply checks names against a record of potential terrorism suspects. And that kind of systems seems hopelessly easy to fool.
The waste of $102m could not come at a worse time either. The General Accounting Office recently issued a scathing report on the Defense Department's failed use of funding. It's also disconcerting to note that Homeland Security has not managed to secure this part of the Homeland nearly three years after the 9-11 attack, especially given the nature of the attack.
Looks like the pants dropping will continue. ®
Related stories
Ministers thwart MEPs, OK EU-US airline data deal
Airport security failures justify snoop system
American Airlines data used to test passenger snoop system
The wrong stuff: what it takes to be a TSA terror suspect
Campaigners fight biometric passports
Data on 10m Northwest fliers handed to NASA for testing
US using EU airline data to test CAPPS II snoop system
Commission agrees US access to EU citizen personal data
Georgia runs from the MATRIX
Congress threatens two hi-tech Gestapo programs
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------