the same. normal people. like my routine has changed. like i don t wake up and hear he calling my name or vice versa. i don t wake up to her conversations. gathers spirits improve; however, when he discovered a small bit of contraband, a gift secreted inside the shampoo bottle samantha left for him. samantha elaine mcdonald. she put it in there so i can always have a picture of her.
secreta secretary jai johnson there ll be security with flights heading to the west. what will this mean? flush it out for us. my sources tell me that what they re really focussing on is the insider threat in this airport. which means that someone could have taken a device and secreted upon a plane. that goes, not just to airports in this region, in this part of the world, but airports throughout the world. including in the united states. and one of the things that investigators are going to be looking at and homeland security officials is really what is the pattern of activity in conduct at an airport? for example, if you have pilfering, if you have criminal behavior, involving planes, well that s an indication, and if you could go and steal something, then you can go and plant something. and this has always been a vulnerability that folks in this nation have been looking at. so i think what this is going to do is oftentimes happens, we re going to react to this situation
without knowing that, the tsa stepped up their inside tactics. there is or operations internally to the airport operations. the check point operations where passengers go through are relatively secure and i say because you always have to work to ensure you do the right thing. you don t want to take that for granted. if it looks like an insider threat that had legitimate access to the airline that could have sec creted a device, there is an operation to ensure they are constantly vetting and checking people who are having access. what about foreign airports? with the u.s. airlines going in there, they have significant influence to be sure the right security procedures are there. there are conventions existing between the united states and foreign partners to ensure we have the equal level. it s a network.
nypd detective, pat, if it is true, that a bomb somehow got secreted on to the plane in the luggage compartment and too early to tell very similar to what happened in lockerbie, and we obviously took steps after lockerbie to make sure that didn t happen again. are we looking at a new type of device that would not be detected by conventional means? it s difficult to say, neil, with any precision what the type of device would be. let s assume a bomb got on the plane for the purposes of this discussion and due diligence. it s astonishingly easy to the extent that there s such a range of individuals who have access to the plane, where they could bring something in like a bomb and secret it. so if that s the case, the big problem here, the broad concern we have spoken about this due diligence, due diligence, due diligence.
do that consistently with great regularity and i applaud each and every one of them. couldn t they be trained to similarly find the bomb? because my guess is, they see the sneaky ways we get our toothpaste through there everyday and they figure out a way to stop us from getting that toothpaste through. but they don t see a become everyday so when one comes through, oh, it must be a clock radio or something. anyway, they don t recognize the clock radio as a bomb, you know what i m saying? well they are trained on an ongoing basis to identify what an ied might look like, secreted in a laptop or carry-on baggage. the problem to get to the bottom of is, is the training good? is it fair it blame the screeners all together? is the equipment working properly? is tsa pushing the private sector to bring in better detection equipment? these are legitimate questions