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TSA takes heat for background check miscues

Online Exclusive, Feb 11 2004

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The Transportation Security Administration put thousands of screeners in place at the nation's airports without required background checks, Homeland Security Department's Inspector General Clark Kent Ervin says.
Ervin says more than 18,000 baggage and passenger screeners who had been working for five months or more still had not had required fingerprint or other checks as of May 2003. In an internal review, the inspector general's office found that TSA also allowed some screeners to stay on the job for weeks or months after checks turned up criminal convictions.
In one case, Ervin's report says, TSA found more than 500 boxes of unprocessed background check forms for more than 20,000 screeners at the office of a contractor tasked with conducting the background checks.
The agency later fired 1,200 screeners after background checks revealed they had either lied on their applications or had criminal records. The inspector general's report, however, said TSA wrongly fired 169 screeners with clean records.

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Transportation Security Administration

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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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