Posted on 09/10/2002 11:41:19 AM PDT by WestCoastGal
Did anyone else hear this report and is there any other news on the radioactive alert in New Jersey? They said the FBI is checking this out right now.
FEDS EXAMINE CARGO CONTAINER FOR RADIOACTIVITY
By WAYNE PARRY
The Associated Press
9/10/02 6:19 PM
NEWARK, N.J. (AP) -- Federal authorities were examining a cargo container at Port Newark on Tuesday after traces of radioactivity were detected during a search for stowaways.
The container was aboard a ship at the former Sea-Land terminal at the seaport, a law enforcement source said, speaking on condition of anonymity. The company is now known as APM Terminals.
The FBI, Port Authority police, the Coast Guard and the U.S. Department of Energy were examining the container, but there was no indication Tuesday evening that it contained a weapon, the source said.
"They're trying to determine if a reading detecting radiation is unusual or not, or if it's just part of the normal course of things," the source said.
The area was cordoned off about mid-afternoon.
The container first came to the attention of U.S. Customs inspectors conducting routine examinations of the cargo when they thought they heard sounds coming from inside it.
"They thought they heard some noises and they suspected smuggling," the source said.
Agents then examined the outside of the container with radiation detectors and determined there was some level of radioactivity in or near it. It was not immediately known what the level was, or if it was considered dangerous.
Calls to the agencies involved in the search were not immediately returned.
A man who answered the telephone at APM Terminals said the business was closed Tuesday evening, and that he did not know the status of the container search.
Problem is, it's usually a hit and run tactic--they don't stick around to get enlightened. Any one see anything from dollygirl since she posted that "omg" post?
Ship searched for nuclear material
Initial tests found elevated radiation levels in cargo hold
NBC, MSNBC AND NEWS SERVICES
Sept. 12 U.S. Special Operations forces on Thursday joined members of the Energy Departments Nuclear Emergency Search Team on board a Liberian-flagged container ship off the coast of New Jersey to search for nuclear material, Pentagon officials told NBC News. The search of the the M/V Palermo Senator was based primarily on intelligence suggesting a ship matching its description could be carrying nuclear material or a nuclear device into the United States, the officials said.
The Coast Guard ordered the ship back to sea, saying it wanted to ascertain if there was a potential risk to public safety and security.
THE SHIP, WHICH arrived in New York Harbor late Monday, was ordered back to sea on Wednesday as a result of the intelligence and initial tests showing slightly elevated radiation levels in its hold, the officials said.
A Coast Guard boarding team took command of the vessel at 2:30 a.m. and took it 6 to 12 miles offshore, saying it wanted to ascertain if there was a potential risk to public safety and security. A Coast Guard cutter was guarding the vessel.
Members of the Energy Departments NEST team, charged with responding to nuclear emergencies, began to test the ships 655 containers later in the day.
The military team joining the hunt on Thursday was bringing specialized equipment capable of looking deep into the stacked containers.
The Pentagon officials, who spoke with NBC News on condition of anonymity, said that the vessel was one of five searched upon arrival based on intelligence indicating that terrorists may be trying to bring nuclear material or a nuclear device into the United States.
After Coast Guard inspectors found unspecified paperwork problems and reported hearing some suspicious sounds in some of the vessels cargo holds, it was ordered to Port Newark/Elizabeth Marine Terminal in New Jersey for further checks.
There, tests by Energy Department inspectors produced contradictory results, with one showing elevated radiation levels and another indicating normal levels. As a result, the ship was ordered back to sea for a definitive determination on whether any radioactive material was on board.
A U.S. government official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told NBC News that the NEST scientists said the initial readings indicated the presence of both gamma and neutron emissions, which can be an indicator of an improvised nuclear device.
But the official stressed that there is nothing to indicate anything more than background radiation at this point.
The NEST squad was established in 1974 to seek out and dismantle improvised nuclear devices, but has been used over the years to investigate suspicious radiological sources.
MSNBC.coms Mike Brunker, NBC News Jim Mikleszewski and Robert Windrem and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
It will get out of hand and we'll be lucky to live through it!
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