Pubdate: Thu, 21 Mar 2002 Source: City Paper (MD) Copyright: 2002 Baltimore City Paper Contact: http://www.citypaper.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/610 Author: Bruce Schimmel SNIFFING UP YOUR PAST Which is more invasive, to be X-rayed or to be sniffed electronically? The answer might surprise you. Now being tested in Orlando and, some hope, coming soon to an airport near you, is the Rapiscan Secure 1000. The Secure 1000 is an X-ray machine that gives screeners an unrestricted view of everything in and under a target's clothing. It should be called RapeScan, quips an aviation industry newsletter, because "it reveals every last inch of said target's assets." (There's a sample Rapiscan Secure 1000 image at http://www.aclu.org/issues/privacy/Bodyscanner.html.) The ACLU's Barry Steinhardt condemns this as a "virtual strip search." He paints a picture of a family on its way to Disney World and having to provide a peepshow on the way. "It's Big Brother meets Mickey Mouse," he told me, adding that he doesn't believe that Americans will stand for it. Steinhardt instead hopes that the FAA will choose another technology, one that sniffs instead of zaps. These "particle analyzers," which look for traces of explosives, would ensure "the same level of security without destroying passengers' bodily privacy," says Steinhardt. Currently, airport screeners use a similar technology when they swab your luggage. But the newest class of analyzer, which looks like a walk-through photo booth, can sniff people all over. Now being tested in Orlando, whole-body sniffers are already being used to screen prison visitors. Because with a flip of a switch, they can detect more than 60 kinds of drugs in extremely small concentrations. False positives have already triggered lawsuits in several states. There are tales of grandmothers testing positive for LSD. Other stories tell of people standing in line being told to count their money and then coming up positive for drugs. No surprise, since much of the currency we carry has minute traces of cocaine. In Iowa, officials have even used visitor sniffing to trigger several full-bore investigations. Randall Wilson of the Iowa Civil Liberties Union told me that when one toddler tested positive for pot, the police launched a child-welfare probe against the mother. Steinhardt insists that airport machines must not be used to detect drugs. That, he says, would be like turning airport screeners into DEA agents. But Orlando's mayor, Glenda Hood, who does double duty as chairwoman of the Florida Domestic Security Advisory Panel, likes having "the ability to use technology to be able to stop some of the drug trafficking." With a flip of a switch, they could sniff up your past. "And the next time you get stopped for a traffic violation," says Wilson, "you may end up staying there for quite a while." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk