What the TSA Isn't Saying About Full Body Scanners and Your Right
to Opt Out Say 'I Opt Out.' Every Time.
DontScan.Us
Get the
facts about Advanced Imaging Technology
Since January
2010 the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) has been rolling
out what they term Advanced Imaging Technology, or Whole Body Imaging,
at airports around the United States. These devices are used to
perform a virtual strip search of passengers, looking beneath the
clothes to display a picture of the skin. The TSA originally said
that these machines would be used only for secondary screening,
for those passengers that set off an alarm at the walk-through metal
detector or Explosives Trace Detection (ETD) machine. They are now
being used as primary screening at 45 airports, to take nude images
of passengers who have done nothing more suspicious than present
a boarding pass.
Remember
to say "I opt out."
Printable
Pamphlets
Advanced
Imaging Technology is a strip search.
Advanced Imaging
Technology (AIT) is also known as Whole Body Imaging (WBI). This
technology uses radiation to penetrate a person's clothes and create
a nude image of the person. This technology is used to determine
whether or not a person has hidden items under clothing. The TSA
considers the images produced by AIT to be "family friendly."
The image above is from an AIT scan of a man named John Wild using
backscatter X-ray. This image is a low-resolution copy of the original,
so it does not show as much detail as the original. Do you consider
this image family friendly?
These images
are generated using radiation, either from a backscatter X-ray or
millimeter wave device. Scientists and researches are already questioning
the safety of irradiating thousands of people per day at every airport
in the country. Several University of California, San Francisco
faculty members delivered a letter
of concern to the TSA noting that the comparison of backscatter
X-ray machine dosage to "cosmic ray exposure inherent to airplane
travel or that of a chest X-ray" is "very misleading"
and have noted that "real independent safety data do not exist."
Risks and
Benefits
Health
Risks
Backscatter
X-ray uses ionizing radation, a known cumulative health hazard,
to produce images of passengers bodies. Children, prengant women,
the elderly, and those with defective DNA repair mechanisms are
considered to be especially susceptible to the type of DNA damage
caused by ionizing radiation. Also at high risk are those who have
had, or currently have, skin cancer. Ionizing radiation's effects
are cumulative, meaning that each time you are exposed you are adding
to your risk of developing cancer. Since the dosage of radiation
from the backscatter X-ray machines is absorbed almsot entirely
by the skin and tissue directly under the skin, averaging the dose
over the whole body gives an inaccurate picture of the actual harm.
In their letter of concern, the UCSF faculty members noted that
"the dose to the skin could be dangerously high." The
eyes are particularly susceptible to the effect of radiation, and
as one
study found allowing the eyes to be exposed to radiation can
lead to an increased incidence of cataracts.
Another type
of device uses millimeter wave technology, which if improperly calibrated
can cause burns. Less is known about the potential health risks
of the millimeter wave devices than those of backscatter X-ray,
and as with the backscatter devices, no independent testing has
been conducted.
Privacy
Risks
Aside from
the health risks of these devices, the fact remains that they allow
strip searches to be conducted on a wide-scale level. That they
are automated and mechanical in no way changes the fact that when
a government agent looks beneath your clothing you are being
strip searched. These strip searches are being performed without
any probable cause or reasonable suspicion, as primary screening.
A recent article in the San
Diego Entertainer on August 31, 2010 stated that "the
scans are detailed enough to identify a person's gender... to identify
a passenger's surgery scars, or to discern whether a woman is on
her menstrual cycle or not." Although the TSA purports to be
staffed by highly trained professionals who respect the privacy
and dignity of travelers, TSA Screener Rolando Negrin was ridiculed
by other TSA screeners for having a small penis after being imaged
by an AIT device.
Property
Risks
There are also
property risks. During the time that a person is inside the full
body imaging machine, it is impossible to maintain a line of sight
to his or her belongings. Remember that because you cannot have
anything in your pockets during the scan, this will include all
your identification, money, and all personal items. Numerous thefts
have been reported at security checkpoints, including incidents
that led to the firing of four TSA employees at JFK as ABC
News reported.
Benefits
The benefits
of the virtual strip searches are that these machines can confirm
only that the imaged areas look normal, but not that items have
not been hidden in body cavities or under folds of skin. Unlike
existing metal detectors and Explosives Trace Detection (ETD) machines,
these devices cannot determine whether the person being imaged is
carrying metal or explosives.
Opting Out
Say "I
Opt Out."
Should you
decide to opt out, you must be aware that the TSA will perform a
pat down instead of subjecting you to the WBI/AIT. The TSA may try
to pressure you into submitting to the WBI/AIT. You are not
required by law to submit to imaging, however, many TSA employees
may attempt to intimidate, coerce or insist that it is required.
You will need to be firm, and sometimes will not be allowed to opt
out unless you state in exactly these words "I opt out."
While you should be able to opt out using your own terms, such as
requesting a pat down instead, or stating that you will not be photographed
nude, remember that not all screeners will be respectful of your
decision. They may continue to insist until you say "I opt
out." In these cases it is up to the individual traveler to
determine whether to stand firm or to use the TSA's preferred wording.
WARNING:
Enhanced Pat Down
Be aware that
the TSA is using what they call an "enhanced pat down"
in many instances. These pat downs are much more rigorous and often
include the TSA using their palms to touch your genitals in a manner
that could feel like sexual assault. If you feel that you or your
child were inappropriately touched during the enhanced pat down,
call for a law enforcement officer.
Reprinted
with permission from DontScan.Us.
November
2, 2010
Copyright
© 2010 DontScan.Us
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