Make that two security tests at MSP, minutes apart, that cops didn't know about
- Article by: PAUL WALSH , Star Tribune
- Updated: May 26, 2011 - 6:02 PM
Airport spokesman Patrick Hogan said Thursday that the federal Transportation Security Administration (TSA) had told airport police that there would be tests on May 12. However, when the tests at Terminal 1 began, no one from TSA told airport police that these were the tests mentioned earlier, Hogan said.
Hogan said that on-the-spot follow-up communication is needed to prevent police from assuming an actual security threat is a merely the anticipated test.
Because of that miscommunication, officers took various actions. One put his gun to the back of the tester.
Hogan said that the communication gaps between the two agencies have since been corrected.
According to the reports:
In the first test, at about 2:20 p.m. on May 12, a device in a shaving kit was made to look like a bomb. It was a cylinder with wires connected to a wrist watch. The device was brought to Checkpoint 1 by a man wearing casual business attire and with a calm demeanor.
Just as police orders to handcuff the tester and evacuate the area were to be carried out, TSA personnel revealed what was actually happening.
At about 2:40 p.m. at Checkpoint 2, two men were subjected to additional screening.
A checkpoint supervisor indicated to an officer that a white man wearing tan military-style garb had a suspicious device.
The officer pointed his gun at the man's back and ordered him to his knees. Another officer handcuffed him.
It wasn't until several minutes later, the police report added, that TSA employees approached the scene and revealed that this was a test.
The two police reports listed different officers responding to the two tests.
The tester in the first instances was described by police as appearing to be of Middle Eastern or south Asian descent. That prompted a leading U.S. Muslim watchdog group to accuse the TSA of discriminatory profiling in its procedures.
TSA spokesman Greg Soule countered Monday that the agency selects testers based on the demographics of the flying public but declined to provide any substantiation of that contention or reveal any specifics about this specific tester.
On Thursday, the TSA's security director for Minnesota, Thomas P. Connors, said that this particular tester was a U.S. citizen of South American ancestry.
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