-
Extensive testing behind new TSA liquid container rules
Officials attempted to replicate London bomb plot; by testing various quantities of explosive liquids, TSA officials found the level where damage could be done without imperiling an airplane; plastic-bag regulations to continue indefinitely
-
-
TSA considers replacing airport X-rays with EDSs
Move prompted by spate of recent problems; ability to detect liquid explosives a key requirement, but technology is immature; cost an issue as well; recent TSA purchases include orders from Analogic and Reveal Imaging
-
-
3M to supply new CARICOM visas
Cricket World Cup spurs Carribean nations to adopt more secure visas; IDIS system will manage everything from enrollment to printing; roll-out speed a major factor in contracting decision
-
-
South Korea unveils armed guard robot for border, critical infrastructure sentry missions
Wait ‘til Representatives Steve King and Tom Tancredo hear about this: A South Korean consortium develops an armed robot for guard mission along border and around critical infrastructure facilities; the robot can identify moving targets from as far as a mile, and it has ‘ears” which understand passwords
-
-
Smiths Detection to deploy chemical detectors at New York's Penn Station
$4 million deal follows 2004 installation at Grand Central; planners say reliability problems concerning dust and cleaning chemicals have been overcome; MTA considers further deployment at other heavily-trafficked stations
-
-
U.S.-E.U. relations under strain over visa waiver program
U.S. refuses to allow new E.U. countries to participate citing security concerns; in response, the European Commission says it will recommend imposing visa requirements on U.S. diplomats
-
-
MIT researchers model automated UAV deployment
The market for UAVs is exploding, but critical issues remain about reliability and tactics; a team at MIT uses model helicopters to simulate a constant surveillance system that automatically switches UAVs in and out of the swarm for refueling and maintenace
-
-
European court deadline for data sharing agreement passes
Negotiations will continue while the U.S. defers imposing $6,000 fines; privacy rights at issue, but U.S. will not budge on refusal to allow passengers to inspect shared information
-
-
Border overgrowth threatens SBInet planning
International Boundary Commission reports severe problems with vegetation obstructing the northern border line; officials will meet in Washington this week to lobby Congress for more funding
-
-
Congress passes border and port security bills
Last-minute vote provides funding for 700 miles of fence; port security bill requires radiation detectors at twenty-two American ports and implements pilot program for those abroad
-
-
Joke at Tim Hawley's expense leads to unfunny security delay
Screeners at Milwaukee airport find nothing to laugh at when passenger writes “Tim Hawley is an idiot” on plastic bag
-
-
Saudi government moves forward with border fence plans
Nervous about terrorism and drug smuggling, Saudi Arabia plans a $12 billion border protection initiative; electronic sensors, ultraviolet cameras, and a massive fingerprinting program are on the agenda; no contracts have been awarded so far
-
-
San Diego shows promise as homeland security incubator
Local companies take advantage of proximity to high education; Daylight Solutions offers a hand held trace explosive detector that relies on lasers; Seacoast Science “volitaile organic chemical detector” identifies sarin, acetone, and other deadly chemicals
-
-
Airport screening system under strain says TSA
A dearth of screeners and cumbersome explosive detectors contribute to problem; fix to cost $5 billion; selling federal tax credits one possible way to get more efficient machines on line
-
-
NYC trains test laser system
Train and subway tunnels are long, dark, and empty — all conditions which make it easier for a terrorist to plant a bomb or otherwise do damage to passenger trains; one way to guard against this is to install detection systems at tunnel entrances to monitor the comings and goings there; the New York City subway is already testing a laser0base system, and this week said it would install a second one
-