(The major difference is that the Israeli folks doing these interviews are 
mostly current/former career intelligence/CI folks, not hourly workers drawn 
from any type of background, thrown into a uniform, and given broad invasive 
powers to control people in the name of protecting the motherland and 
perpetuating the State of Fear(tm).  I like the approach but the US execution 
of this approach will not be useful IMHO  -- rick)


TSA to put Hub fliers on the spot

Some skeptical of new security program

By Natalie Sherman and Joe Dwinell
Tuesday, August 2, 2011 - Updated 24 minutes ago

http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1355725

Boston’s TSA screeners — part of a security force whose competency has come 
under fire nationwide — soon will be carrying out sophisticated behavioral 
inspections under a first-in-the-nation program that’s already raising concerns 
of racial profiling, harassment of innocent travelers and longer lines.

The training for the Israeli-style screening — a projected $1 billion national 
program dubbed Screening Passengers by Observation Techniques — kicks off today 
at Logan International Airport and will be put to use in Terminal A on Aug. 15. 
It requires screeners to make quick reads of whether passengers pose a danger 
or a terror threat based on their reactions to a set of routine questions.

But security experts wonder whether Transportation Safety Administration agents 
are up to the challenge after an embarrassing string of blunders — including 
patting down a 95-year-old grandmother in Florida and making her remove her 
adult diaper and frisking a 3-year-old girl who screamed “stop touching me” at 
a checkpoint in Tennessee.

“I’m not convinced that the TSA has good enough people to make the Israeli 
approach work on a large scale,” said Glenn Reynolds, a University of Tennessee 
law professor who has followed the TSA at his blog, Instapundit.com.

But he noted, “Almost anything would be an improvement over the clown show 
we’ve got now.”

A leading proponent of Israel’s detection techniques agreed the TSA will be 
severely tested.

“The question is obviously, what is the quality of the verbal interaction that 
is going to be implemented?” asked Rafi Ron, a former Logan consultant and CEO 
of New-Age Security Solutions. “If it will have a poor quality, then obviously 
it will be another way to waste taxpayer money and increase the hassle to 
passengers. If not, then this will be great.”

Civil libertarians argue the screening is TSA showmanship — coming just weeks 
before the 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks — and 
could quickly devolve into profiling.

“It’s an ineffective waste of taxpayer dollars that has the potential and the 
reality of leading to profiling based on race and ethnicity,” said 
Massachusetts ACLU executive director Carol Rose, who dismissed SPOT as 
“security theater.”

Logan’s TSA Federal Security Director George Naccara said he doesn’t expect to 
see longer lines, just better security in the long run. “I’m trying to refocus 
the screening effort,” he said. “We have finite resources, so we have to figure 
out a way to use them more efficiently.”

Under the SPOT program, as passengers hand over their boarding passes and 
identification, specially trained agents will ask three to four questions — 
from “Where have you been?” to “Do you have a business card?” and “Where are 
you traveling?” — while looking for “micro expressions,” such as lack of eye 
contact, that might hint at nefarious intent.

Suspicious individuals will be pulled aside for more questioning, full-body 
scans and pat-downs. If the encounter escalates, agents will call in state 
police.

At Logan, about 70 agents — all with college degrees — are undergoing training 
by an international consulting firm that includes a four-day classroom course 
and 24 hours of on-the-job experience, said TSA spokeswoman Ann Davis.

Logan passenger Lina Texeira, 41, of Clearwater, Fla., a nurse who has done 
psychiatric training, said yesterday she backs the SPOT program — to a point.

“You’re telling me someone with a three-week training course is going to be 
able to do that?” she said. “It’s not against the TSA. I just don’t think the 
training they’re getting is enough.”
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