Dozens of US airport workers linked to terror—official

Passengers at O'Hare International Airport wait in a ticketing line Tuesday, May 13, 2014, in Chicago. Smoke in a regional radar facility forced a halt to all incoming and outgoing flights at both of Chicago’s airports. The Federal Aviation Administration says all its personnel were evacuated from the Chicago Terminal Radar Approach Control, or TRACON, facility in suburban Elgin at around 11:30 a.m. Tuesday. AP

Passengers at O’Hare International Airport wait in a ticketing line in this file photo taken May 13, 2014, in Chicago. The US Department of Homeland Security has found dozens of airport workers with terror links, putting the Transportation Security Agency on the spot. AP

WASHINGTON, United States – The agency in charge of US transportation security came under renewed fire Tuesday as a report revealed that American airports had hired dozens of people with terror links.

The Transportation Security Agency is already reeling after a recent Department of Homeland Security report found that investigators could sneak fake bombs and weaponry through security with a 95 percent success rate.

Homeland Security Inspector General John Roth discussed before lawmakers his new report that found the TSA failed to detect at least 73 people with links to terrorism who were hired by US airports.

By law, the TSA had “limited oversight” over the hiring process and thus “lacked assurance that it properly vetted all credential applicants,” the report said.

Roth said the law needed to be changed to give the agency access to all relevant information, including FBI terrorist watch lists.

Becky Roering, an assistant security director at the Minneapolis-St Paul International Airport, told the hearing that former “badged” employees had even gone to Syria to join the Islamic State group.

During the same hearing, a TSA official criticized a program to pre-check passengers either randomly or because they have been given “known” or “trusted traveler” status and are deemed to pose a low risk.

“TSA is handing out ‘PreCheck’ status like Halloween candy in an effort to expedite passengers as quickly as possible,” Roering said.

More than a million people have signed up for the TSA’s PreCheck program, and another seven million have been randomly chosen for expedited boarding checks.

In one case, a former member of an extremist organization found himself randomly given access to the PreCheck line but a TSA worker recognized him and alerted his superior.

Roering also said TSA staff have low morale and work in a climate of fear and distrust.

Last week, Homeland Security head Jeh Johnson announced new measures to improve security screenings at American airports after investigators were able to smuggle mock explosives and weapons through checkpoints dozens of times.

Johnson reassigned Melvin Carraway, the TSA’s acting head, and replaced him with another interim director, Mark Hatfield.

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