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Stowaway sheds light on air security hole

Online Exclusive, Sep 19 2003

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A man unwittingly exposed gaps in U.S. air cargo security by shipping himself more than 1,240 miles on a cargo plane last week.
Charles McKinley, 25, said Wednesday that he wanted to see his family but could not afford a plane ticket, so he packed himself in a wooden crate and was loaded into a cargo plane with the help of a friend.
"Anyone can climb into a box that's properly packaged, as was demonstrated by this fool," warned Captain Phillip Beall of the Airline Pilots Security Alliance, a group that supports arming pilots. "But a fuel-laden 767 full of boxes can be commandeered and used in exactly the same way as fuel-laden planes were used on Sept. 11," he said.
Less than 10 percent of air cargo is inspected, and machines used to inspect entire containers of cargo are confined primarily to areas along the U.S.-Canadian border and major U.S. seaports.
"We have concentrated in recent months on protecting aircrafts that carry people, but we have to do more," Asa Hutchinson, a senior official at the Department of Homeland Security, told ABC television.

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Transportation Security Administration

Federal Aviation Administration

U.S. Department of Transportation

Government Security magazine

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Access Control & Security Systems
Access Control and Security Systems magazine is a business-to-business publication that focuses on how America's commercial, industrial and institutional facilities employ security systems to make their sites safer. Our readers -- more than 39,000 of them -- come mostly from larger companies (Fortune 1000-size) and are the high-level personnel in charge of security at their companies or institutions. We focus on the equipment used in security systems, and especially on how that equipment is integrated into "security solutions."

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