Monitoring
HazMat Shipments
I.J. Hudson,
Tech Reporter
A truckload of explosive materials leaves I-94
in Chicago and heads toward the Sears Tower. Within
15 seconds an alarm goes out from a central monitoring
point to local law enforcement and other agencies.
The truck is intercepted. A terrorist attack is
averted.
That's the scenario envisioned by MillenniuM
Information Systems of Rosslyn, VA.
Every day, about 80-thousand trucks carry hazardous
materials on our highways. A few of those trucks
cause traffic and cleanup problems. But some security
people worry these shipments could be used as
weapons by terrorists.
MillenniuM has developed a service that could
tie together GPS information from trucks, driver
information, cargo information, and share alerts
with law enforcement as well as weigh stations
and toll takers. Handheld computers linked wirelessly
to the system through the Internet could show
pictures and allow workers to send alerts. "They
can confirm or deny any information we have in
this system versus what the trucking company says
they should be carrying, or where they should
be going," says Christopher Bender, one of
Millennium's Technology gurus.
The same system could have an air component to
check passengers against FBI, CIA, INS and other
agency watch lists as reservations are being made,
or at the ticket counter. The system is not asking
for intelligence, just a "yes" or "no"
to the question, "Is this person on your
watch list?"
The proposed system also flags suspicious habits.
Richard Reid, the man accused of trying to light
explosives in his shoes on a flight from Paris
to Miami, paid cash for his ticket and did not
check any baggage: two red flags in this system,
even if Reid were not on any agency watch list.
Sean Bordner is a Senior Developer with Millennium:
"He cleared the FBI. He cleared everybody
else. But because of those two flags right there,
it could have been just one of those two flags,
he still got triggered by us."
Triggered does not necessarily mean arrest, but
the system would forward alerts to security -
on laptops, handheld computers or web-enabled
cell phones.
The biggest obstacle to making a system like
this work: "The reluctance of federal agencies
to want to share their data, when all we're asking
for is a yes or no answer," says John Yagesh,
Millennium's President. Yagesh says sharing information
that is already out there could securely speed
up the movement of passengers through airports,
and improve the odds of catching bad guys. Yagesh
estimates the cost of his company's service and
maintenance would run about 2-milllion dollars
a year. Government agencies could add components
as they saw fit once the infrastructure was tied
together.
MillenniuM has sent its proposal to the Department
of Transportation, Department of Defense, the
FBI and others.
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