-------- Original Message --------
Subject:        Police concerned about order to stop weapons screening at
Obama rally
Date:   Fri, 22 Feb 2008 09:37:56 -0800
From:   Chris de Morsella <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:     Tracey de Morsella <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, 'julia
demorsella' <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, 'paul demorsella' <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

http://www.star-telegram.com/dallas_news/story/486413.html
*Police concerned about order to stop weapons screening at Obama rally*
       *By JACK DOUGLAS Jr.*
       *Star-Telegram Staff Writer*

Barack Obama speaks Wednesday at a Democratic rally in Dallas' Reunion
Arena. Police were told to stop screening people for weapons before the
rally began.
<http://media.star-telegram.com/smedia/2008/02/21/05/416-324450-268988.standalone.prod_affiliate.58.jpg>

STAR-TELEGRAM/RODGER MALLISON

Barack Obama speaks Wednesday at a Democratic rally in Dallas' Reunion
Arena. Police were told to stop screening people for weapons before the
rally began.


DALLAS -- Security details at Barack Obama's rally Wednesday stopped
screening people for weapons at the front gates more than an hour before
the Democratic presidential candidate took the stage at Reunion Arena.

The order to put down the metal detectors and stop checking purses and
laptop bags came as a surprise to several Dallas police officers who
said they believed it was a lapse in security.

Dallas Deputy Police Chief T.W. Lawrence, head of the Police
Department's homeland security and special operations divisions, said
the order -- apparently made by the U.S. Secret Service -- was meant to
speed up the long lines outside and fill the arena's vacant seats before
Obama came on.

"Sure," said Lawrence, when asked if he was concerned by the great
number of people who had gotten into the building without being checked.
But, he added, the turnout of more than 17,000 people seemed to be a
"friendly crowd."

The Secret Service did not return a call from the //Star-Telegram//
seeking comment.

Doors opened to the public at 10 a.m., and for the first hour security
officers scanned each person who came in and checked their belongings in
a process that kept movement of the long lines at a crawl. Then, about
11 a.m., an order came down to allow the people in without being checked.

Several Dallas police officers said it worried them that the arena was
packed with people who got in without even a cursory inspection.

They spoke on condition of anonymity because, they said, the order was
made by federal officials who were in charge of security at the event.

"How can you not be concerned in this day and age," said one policeman.

JACK DOUGLAS Jr., 817-390-7700
[EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>





 
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