U.S. Air Cargo Security Criticized
A test of airline cargo security in Europe and Brazil shows five of six lead-lined packages shipped to the United States were not opened or X-rayed, CBS said.
Over a 2-month period, CBS News shipped the specially created packages from London, Paris and Rio de Janeiro to various airports in the United States.
While the lead lining would have concealed a bomb from X-rays, the network instead shipped a high-speed type of film that would fog if X-rayed. The packages were also rigged so they would reveal if they had been opened.
Only one -- from Brazil -- had been opened when it arrived, and none showed signs of having been X-rayed, the report said.
However, Robert Jamison, second-in-command at the Transportation Security Administration, said the test didn't accurately represent inspection techniques and procedures, as even without opening cargo, it can be inspected with explosive-detection devices and bomb-sniffing dogs.
Copyright 2005 LexisNexis, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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