http://homelandsecuritynewswire.com/dhs-struggles-detect-billions-cash-smugg
led-across-us-mexico-border

 


DHS struggles to detect billions in cash smuggled across U.S.-Mexico border


Published 6 May 2011

Each year Mexican drug cartels smuggle billions of dollars of cash into and
out of the United States, yet despite their best efforts, DHS officials are
struggling to stem the flow of cash that is fueling the drug wars; the
Department of Justice estimates that each year Mexican drug cartels smuggle
as much as $39 billion in cash across the southern border; DHS officials say
that it is having a difficult time detecting cash; officials are actively
seeking to develop technological solutions to help detect individuals
smuggling large amounts of cash across the border; but the technology to
accomplish this goals may not exist yet as there are several large technical
and logistical hurdles that must be overcome

http://homelandsecuritynewswire.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/standard/
cash_stash.jpg

A captured "cash stash" of mostly U.S. currency // Source: dontbesquare.com

Each year Mexican drug cartels smuggle billions of dollars of cash into and
out of the United States, yet despite their best efforts, DHS officials are
struggling
<http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/05/04/financial-cash-idUSN0416642920110
504>  to stem the flow of cash that is fueling the drug wars.

The Department of Justice estimates that each year Mexican drug cartels
smuggle as much as $39 billion in cash across the southern border.

In an attempt to catch currency smugglers, U.S. Customs and Border Patrol
launched an "outbound" inspection program in 2009. But, according to the
Government Accountability Office, the program only interdicted $67 million
in its first two years.

DHS officials say that it is having a difficult time detecting cash.

Current methods include using specially trained dogs and x-ray machines, but
these have proven to be ineffective.

Joseph Burke, the chief of the Department of Homeland Security's Bulk Cash
Smuggling Center, explains, "There are a lot of false positives, especially
when looking at a vehicle and trying to interpret anomalies and identify
cash. Cash is easy to conceal in a small amount of space and it doesn't show
up crystal clear on an X-ray like a weapon would."

To help combat this problem, DHS officials are actively seeking to develop
technological solutions to help detect individuals smuggling large amounts
of cash across the border.

Last year the DHS Science and Technology Directorate called on private
companies to design "a device that will search for and identify bulk
quantities of currency - secreted on persons, in hand baggage and luggage,
and/or in privately owned vehicles."

The agency sought to purchase a non-intrusive detection device that would be
capable of screening a person walking with luggage or a slowly-driven
vehicle for cash.

Last October, DHS awarded three companies $100,000 to conduct feasibility
studies that concluded last week.

DHS is currently reviewing the proposals and will decide if any of the ideas
from Lattice Government Services Inc., Intelligent Automation Inc., or
Connecticut Analytical Corp are worth investing in.

The agency will come to a conclusion within the next thirty to sixty days,
and if a company is chosen it will develop a prototype and begin
field-testing.

But it seems that the technology to accomplish its goals may not exist yet
as there are several large technical and logistical hurdles that must be
overcome.

Paul Burgess, the chief executive of Lattice Inc., explained some of the
difficulties that his company faced in developing their concept.

"It isn't just currency moving through an airport, a body scanner will pick
that up. The bigger problem is at border crossings. You can put money in a
side door and it's going to be very difficult to detect," he said.

In addition, DHS required that the scanners be able to detect U.S. and
Canadian dollars as well as euros.

Further complicating detection efforts is the need for speed.

Douglas Farah, a senior fellow with the International Assessment and
Strategy Center whostudies detecting large quantities of cash, said that any
scanning device that adds too much time to inspections would create
unacceptable delays at border crossings.

"Both sides of the border face the same insurmountable obstacle - how to
carry out more inspections and become more efficient without damaging the
vast amount of legal cargo that rolls through every day. Adding 45 seconds
per search per car per day ends up being hundreds of hours in extra waiting
time for legal commerce," Farah said.

Lattice hopes to overcome these challenges by designing a solution that is
able to quickly detect cash by relying on electromagnetic, ink-related, or
some other factor.

Burgess envisions that the device will resemble a metal detector.

"Ideally, you want a pass or fail scenario. Like a metal detector, either it
beeps or it doesn't beep, that's where the technology needs to be graduated
today," he said.

While DHS Smuggling Center Chief Burke is enthusiastic about the idea, he
remains skeptical that the technology to implement such capabilities is
feasible.

He says installing effective currency detection technology would be "a
significant step in the right direction."

But, he added, "The reality is that while that would help, getting from
today to that point is a significant challenge."

 



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