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  • 2011-05-17 (xsd:date)
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  • Homeland security chief stresses that very, very, very few people get hands-on treatment at U.S. airports (en)
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  • As luck would have it, U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano had heaps of ornery subjects to tackle during a recent talk before the Atlanta Press Club. Attendees at the May 7 luncheon peppered her with questions about Osama bin Laden’s death, which took place just five days earlier. They asked about Georgia’s new immigration legislation and the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s response to recent, historic tornadoes that devastated towns across the Southeast. One raised the touchiest -- literally -- of all of topics: getting patted down at the airport. Will we go past the grope-and-grab phase? a luncheon attendee asked Napolitano. The machines that scan the bodies and so forth? Are there better ways of doing it? Well, actually, very, very, very few people get a pat-down, Napolitano replied. It’s only under very limited circumstances. They do, however, get -- those who are patted down -- tend to get on YouTube. she quipped. And look, look, no one wants to see a 6-year-old patted down. Even if it’s done according to procedural protocol, she said. In April, a video was posted on YouTube.com of a 6-year-old girl being patted down at the New Orleans airport. Just this week, images of a baby getting frisked at Kansas City International Airport made headlines as well. Very, very, very few people? we wondered. That’s a lot of verys. Given the public outcry, Napolitano’s estimate sent PolitiFact Georgia scribes scrambling. We asked the Transportation Security Administration for more details. The TSA is part of the Department of Homeland Security and protects the nation’s transportation systems. Last fall, the TSA began to use special scanners that showed images of passengers including what was underneath their clothing. Critics called it a virtual strip search and said it was too invasive. The TSA offered pat-downs as an alternative, but these also frustrated critics. In October, the agency announced that officers would implement enhanced pat-down procedures. Previously, screeners used the backs of their hands to inspect sensitive areas. Now they use the front of their hands and conduct a more thorough search. Adults can also receive pat-downs on a random basis. Children receive modified pat-downs if they require extra screening. As the busy Thanksgiving travel week approached, passengers complained about having their genitals and breasts touched. A video appeared on YouTube.com of a toddler crying during the pat-down and shouting for a screener to stop. Parents were outraged. Travelers threatened they would stop flying, and some predicted long airport security lines. The expected chaos never materialized. For the most part, passengers went through the screening process without a fuss. All in all, people wanted to get to their destinations, said Christopher Bidwell, a security expert with the industry group Airports Council International. We asked the TSA how many pat-downs it conducts at the nation’s airports. Atlanta TSA spokesman Jon Allen told us that during March, 3 percent of air passengers were subject to a pat-down. The TSA collects this data by monitoring data from select airports throughout the year, he wrote in an email. That number is consistent with that of previous time periods. PolitiFact Georgia looked for other pat-down data to see whether other groups have verified TSA numbers. Critics such as the American Civil Liberties Union and passenger rights groups did not. Neither did industry groups we contacted. We did find a Gallup poll conducted Nov. 19-21 that said 15 percent of adults who have flown two or more times in the past year received a full-body pat-down. The survey’s margin of error was 4 percentage points. The 15 percent figure does not contradict the TSA figures. The more often you pass through a security checkpoint, the more chance you’ll receive a pat-down. PolitiFact Georgia therefore took the TSA figures and did some math. The TSA’s Allen told us that on an average day, about 2 million people are screened at TSA checkpoints. Three percent of 2 million is 60,000 people. That means that over the course of a month, roughly 1.8 million people receive a pat-down. That’s more than four times the population of Atlanta. That doesn’t sound like very, very, very few people to us. If Napolitano said that a small percentage of passengers get patted down each month, she would have been correct. But she talked about people. In addition, she used the superlative very three times, even though the TSA’s own figures show that the numbers of passengers who receive a pat-down can top 1 million in a single month. We rate her statement Pants On Fire. (en)
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