Border Patrol uses once-controversial X-ray devices

By Arthur H. Rotstein
the Associated Press
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 03.21.2009

See-through technology that stirred concerns about privacy of passengers being scanned at airports has been adapted for less- sensitive use south of Tucson by the U.S. Border Patrol.

The agency is checking vehicles for hidden compartments and contraband with a breakthrough X-ray technology mounted in vehicles it calls Z backscatter vans.

The mobile device, loaded on a Ford F-350 pickup truck like a camper shell, can scan any vehicle, including tractor-trailer rigs, in minutes.

It can detect drugs; explosives; plastic weapons; and nuclear, radioactive and organic threats, said Al White, patrol agent in charge of the Border Patrol's station at Nogales, Ariz., about 60 miles south of Tucson.
It also can detect stowaways, although White said the system won't intentionally be used to scan humans, just vehicles.

"This is closer to the vehicle-cargo inspection systems used at most ports of entry," said White. "It uses non-intrusive inspection technologies."
So-called backscatter radiation technology uses a narrow, low-intensity X-ray beam the size of a laser pointer.

The X-rays are reflected from their target to a receiver and then transmitted to a laptop in the truck's cab that displays the images.

"It does not contain a source of radiation," White said. "It creates its own X-rays by using an X-ray tube."

In February 2007, the federal government began testing a machine at Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport that used backscatter radiation to scan a person's entire body.

The low-intensity beam scanned the body at a high speed, and the amount of radiation given off was equal to 15 minutes of exposure to natural background radiation such as the sun's rays.

Essentially, it looked through people's clothing, and early versions showed the human body's contours with embarrassing clarity. The Transportation Security Administration adjusted the equipment to give the image a line-drawing likeness that still managed to detect concealed items.

The TSA has stopped testing the backscatter devices because their leases ran out and haven't been renewed, said Nico Melendez, a spokesman in Los Angeles.

Instead, another device, a "millimeter wave" machine, which began testing late in 2007, is now being used, still on a pilot basis, in about 20 airports around the country, Melendez said.

People who support using such scanners insist that they will ease detection of concealed objects like plastic weapons or liquids that traditional metal detectors miss.

But critics in the United States and the European Union called the scanners an unacceptable invasion of human dignity.

"I continue to believe that these are virtual strip searches," Barry Steinhardt, director of the program on technology and liberty for the American Civil Liberties Union, said at the time.

The Border Patrol said the technology's versatility is a huge boon for security and smuggling detection.
"This is what's impressive," said White.

"It's able to reveal things such as car and truck bombs, explosives ... and other organic threats, radioactive threats including nuclear devices and dirty bombs.

"It's capable of detecting low levels of radioactivity from gamma rays and neutrons. This is ideal for dirty bombs and conventional explosives. And on top of that, stowaways who could be illegal immigrants or potential terrorists" can also be detected.

The devices cost $750,000, and one has been in use since Feb. 13 at the Border Patrol's interim checkpoint on Interstate 19 between Nogales and Tucson.

The Border Patrol has three more deployed in California and Texas.
So far, the device in use along I-19 has detected more than 1,500 pounds of marijuana hidden in tractor-trailers, in gasoline tanks and in other compartments.

It also helped agents nab five illegal immigrants squirreled in a compartment covered with nailed-down plywood that was secreted beneath the sleeping quarters on a big rig.

http://www.azstarnet.com/sn/border/285372.php