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To: Indie
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3,075 posted on 12/15/2004 10:30:17 AM PST by all4one (My thoughts and prayers are with our soldiers.....and their families)
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Newark airport screeners spot — then lose — fake bomb

12/15/2004, 12:16 p.m. ET
By WAYNE PARRY
The Associated Press

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Baggage screeners at Newark Liberty International Airport spotted — and then lost — a fake bomb planted in luggage by a supervisor during a training exercise.

Despite an hours-long search Tuesday night, the bag, containing a fake bomb complete with wires, a detonator and a clock, made it onto an Amsterdam-bound flight. It was recovered by airport security officials in Amsterdam when the flight landed several hours later.

"This really underscores the importance of the TSA's ongoing training exercises," said Ann Davis, a spokeswoman for the Transportation Security Administration, the agency responsible for screening passengers and baggage for weapons and explosives. "At no time did the bag pose a threat and at no time was anyone in danger."

The incident at Terminal C was only the latest embarrassment for federal screeners at Newark Liberty International, one of the airports from which some of the Sept. 11, 2001 hijackers took off.

In October, The Star-Ledger of Newark reported that screeners missed one in four fake explosives and weapons in secret weekly tests conducted throughout the summer by TSA agents.

Screeners there also have been plagued by problems with absenteeism.

In Tuesday night's test, a TSA supervisor secretly placed the bomb, which was designed to resemble the plastic explosive Semtex, inside a bag that was put through screening machines, Davis said.

A baggage screening machine sounded an alarm, but workers somehow lost track of the bag, which was then loaded onto the Continental Airlines flight that was due to take off around 6 p.m.

Despite the incident, no flights were delayed and the terminal remained open.

The Newark incident closely resembled another embarrassing incident last week in France, where security officials lost a bag containing real explosives that were being used to train bomb-sniffing dogs. That led French authorities to prohibit using live explosives in future tests.

Davis said the TSA is still investigating how screeners lost track of the bag.

"It was an error that the bag was not intercepted before it was loaded," she said, adding it was too soon to say if anyone would be disciplined for the failure.


3,076 posted on 12/15/2004 11:02:46 AM PST by freeperfromnj
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