Full-body scanner row: US denies checking all travellers
November 23rd, 2010 - 3:51 pm ICT by IANSWashington, Nov 23 (IANS) As dozens of images taken by full-body scanners at airports leaked on internet, the US has sought to quell complaints about the new equipment and pat-down search saying not all travellers are subject to the enhanced checking.
The government says most of the passengers won’t be subjected to full-body scans or pat-downs at airports and the hype swirling around a few higly publicised cases does not reflect the reality of the new safety inspections, according to the Los Angeles Times.
In the first two weeks after the enhanced screening measures began Nov 1, the Department of Homeland Security said about 700 of an estimated 28 million airline passengers lodged complaints with the Transportation Security Administration (TSA).
The TSA said that the pat-downs are rare - involving 3 percent of all airline passengers - and that travelers can request that they be done in a private room.
Of the passengers asked to submit to a full-body scan, 1 percent have chosen to instead undergo a pat-down, which includes TSA agents using their hands to check sensitive areas such as the groin and bra area, the report said.
The government has been facing criticism after videos showing x-ray images of passengers circulated worldwide through internet.
In one video, TSA agents at the Salt Lake City airport were performing a pat-down on a young boy after his father decided to remove the boy’s shirt. In another widely-seen YouTube clip, San Diego native John Tyner warns agents not to “touch my junk” as he refuses to submit to either a full-body scan or a pat-down.
Federal officials have said that under the new policy, most passengers will continue to pass only through metal detectors. A smaller group will be asked to submit to a body scan. Only passengers who refuse the body scan or trip the alarm on the metal detector will be asked to undergo a pat-down.
TSA agents can allow passengers who trip the metal detector to check again for any metal and pass through the detector again.
With the body scanners, the TSA uses software and other technology that blurs the faces of passengers or doesn’t pick up facial features.
In terms of radiation exposure, the energy is thousands of times less than that of a cellphone transmission, federal officials said.
The scanners do not store the images.
White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said the government was constantly reevaluating security techniques, saying they “have to evolve.”
“Our goal must be to maximise protection and security and minimise inconvenience and invasiveness,” Gibbs was quoted as saying. “It’s not an easy task.”
- California man thrown out of San Diego airport for refusing full-body scan, pat down - Nov 16, 2010
- Video of US man refusing full-body scan at airport goes viral - Nov 16, 2010
- California Man John Tyner Refuses Body Scan In San Diego Airport - Nov 16, 2010
- Barack Obama Asserts That The TSA's Pat-Downs Are Invasive But Necessary To Attain Security - Nov 21, 2010
- US seeking privacy-security balance over airport security: Robert Gibbs - Nov 23, 2010
- New security checks at US airports like 'foreplay' - Oct 30, 2010
- Man strips at Va. Airport checkpoint in protest - Jan 05, 2011
- TSA Issues Video Message On Pat Down Technique - Nov 21, 2010
- US man strips to underwear in protest of airport security screening - Nov 25, 2010
- Get ready to experience 'enhanced pat downs' at the airports - Nov 01, 2010
- 'Now 'body scanners' could be deployed at US train stations, subways, other mass transits' - Nov 26, 2010
- ExpressJet Airlines Pilot Refuses To Go Through The Security Measures Of A Full-Body Scan And Pat Down - Oct 21, 2010
- Security checks at US airports to get more 'touchy' - Oct 29, 2010
- Miss USA speaks about her ordeal at the hands of a TSA agent - Apr 28, 2011
- SNL pokes fun at the TSA security procedures with their skit - Nov 23, 2010
Tags: airline passengers, body scanner, body scanners, department of homeland, department of homeland security, federal officials, full body scans, john tyner, los angeles times, metal detector, metal detectors, private room, safety inspections, salt lake city, salt lake city airport, screening measures, sensitive areas, transportation security administration, tsa, x ray