Senate bill would make airport body scanners mandatory

Rawstory
By Daniel
Tencer
Saturday,
July 10th, 2010
A bipartisan bill introduced in the Senate
requiring all airports to use full-body scanners lacks sufficient privacy
safeguards, says a prominent watchdog group.
The Electronic Privacy Information Center says
the bill, introduced in the Senate by Sen. Bob Bennett (R-UT) and Sen. Amy
Klobuchar (D-MN), "contains particularly weak privacy provision[s] that ignore
many of the problems with the devices already uncovered."
The
bill (PDF),
known as the Securing Aircraft From Explosives Responsibly: Advanced Imaging
Recognition ("SAFER AIR") Act, would require all commercial airports in the US
to use full-body scanners as their primary screening method by no later than
2013. The bill is a response to criticism among some lawmakers that the DHS has
been dragging its feet on implementing the technology.
Full-body scanners have been in testing at
some airports in the US for several years, and the Department of Homeland
Security ramped up expansion of the screening program after the Christmas Day
bombing attempt. Some 48 airports have installed the machines so far, and the
DHS has
purchased 450 of them.
The bill includes clauses designed to protect
passengers' privacy, such as a requirement that the images the scanners create
"cannot be stored, transferred, copied or printed." It also forbids security
personnel from having cameras near the machinery.
Those clauses are designed to allay the fears
of privacy advocates, who worry that images taken by the machines could be used
to humiliate travelers or even
create child pornography.
However, the bill's privacy measures appear to
be little different from the policy already set out by the Department of
Homeland Security, which states that body-scanner technology is used in such a
way that it "cannot store, print, transmit or save the image."
But, as
RAW STORY
reported earlier this year, the machines being installed at airports have a
setting that allows them to store and transmit the images, and the Senate bill
includes no provisions excluding minors from being scanned.
There have been several high-profile cases of
screening technology being abused. In one heavily-publicized incident, a TSA
worker in Miami who was scanned as part of a training session allegedly
assaulted a co-worker who had mocked the size of his genitals.
In another incident, a British airport
security worker
was
reprimanded after making comments about a co-worker's breasts after a
screening.
The Electronic Privacy Information Center has
filed a lawsuit against DHS asking for program to be suspended "pending an
independent review."
But Sens. Bennett and Klobuchar insist there
is "no excuse" not to implement the technology.
“As the threats against our nation’s air
transportation networks continue to evolve, the screening technologies we rely
on to identify and counter these threats must evolve as well,” Klobuchar
said in a press release. “With so much at stake, we need to make sure we are
using the best security tools and that all security forces are working together
to stop potential threats before they get off the ground.”
“Magnetometers are not enough in this post
9/11 world, where threats have increased but screening technology has largely
remained the same," Bennett said. "With much more advanced technology on the
market, there is absolutely no excuse for the delayed implementation."
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