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Scanner that sees through clothes
tested
Phoenix -
An X-ray security scanner that can see through clothing was put into
its first operational use Friday at Sky Harbor International Airport
and could be rolled out to two other major airports by year's end.
The so-called "backscatter"
technology has been controversial, with critics saying the
high-resolution images are too invasive. But the Transportation
Security Administration adjusted the machine's images so the
normally graphic pictures can be blurred in certain areas while
still being effective at detecting concealed weapons or other
threats.
"I think the work we've done with
the industry to address the privacy concerns has really done well,"
said Nico Melendez, an agency spokesman.
Passengers selected for secondary
screening by the device are asked to stand in set spots in front of
the closet-sized X-ray unit with hands palms out, then turn around
for a second screening from the back. The entire operation takes
about a minute.
The machine will be tested for up
to 90 days at a single checkpoint at Sky Harbor's largest terminal,
which hosts US Airways and Southwest Airlines, two of the airlines
with the most flights in and out of Phoenix. The technology could be
left in place after the trial period, and Melendez said the agency
hopes to also roll out the technology at Los Angeles International
Airport and New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport by
year's end.
During the pilot program, the
machine will be used only as a secondary screening measure;
passengers who fail the standard screening process will be able to
choose between the new device or a typical pat-down search.
"It's 100 percent voluntary, so if
the passenger doesn't feel comfortable with it the passenger doesn't
have to go through it," Melendez said.
Melendez declined to discuss the
TSA's method for determining which passengers are selected for
secondary screening.
The TSA said that the security
officer who works with the passenger going through the screening
will never see the image the machine produces. The images will be
viewed by another officer who will be about 50 feet away and won't
see the passenger.
The machine can't store the image
or transmit them. "Once we're done screening the passenger, the
image is gone forever," Melendez said.
The device being used at Sky Harbor
costs about $100,000 but is being loaned free from the manufacturer,
AS&E of Boston, said Melendez.
Melendez said the TSA is confident
in the technology's safety and efficiency.
He said a person who goes through
the process will receive about the same amount of radiation as a
person flying for two minutes at an altitude of 30,000 feet.
Rep. Harry Mitchell (news, bio,
voting record), D-Ariz., viewed the machine in use at the airport
Friday and said privacy concerns have been addressed because the
screening is voluntary.
"It does provide a higher level of
security," Mitchell said. "Hopefully it will speed the process up.
The fact is that we want to be efficient.-- Associated
Press
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