Las Vegas Review-Journal

Truck attack awareness distribute­d around LV

Materials, guidance from various sources predate NYC attack

- By Todd Prince and Rio Lacanlale Las Vegas Review-journal

The Metropolit­an Police Department, national security agencies and truck rental headquarte­rs had been educating Las Vegas employees about suspicious customer behavior long before Halloween’s deadly truck attack that killed eight in lower Manhattan.

“We have been doing training dating back to November 2016, after the Paris and Nice attacks, as part of our ‘See Something, Say Something campaign,’” said Metro spokesman Jay Rivera.

Rivera said Metro has visited many rental companies and transporta­tion companies, such as Uber and Lyft. He did not say how many local transporta­tion companies Metro has visited to date.

The Review-journal contacted more than a dozen truck rental agencies in the Las Vegas area. Seven of the 11 that agreed to speak said Metro officers had stopped by their offices to hand out safety literature and speak with management.

Local managers for Enterprise and Penske declined to comment, directing the Review-journal to seek comment from their corporate headquarte­rs in other states.

Briefing employees

Metro officers came to visit Safeguard 2 Mini Storage, a truck rental and storage company on Russell Road, late last year to hand out educationa­l material and brief employees about terrorist threats, said manager Joe Van Camp. They visited Ryder in the spring, said service manager Roy Shappard. Ryder has

RENTALS

two locations in Las Vegas.

But employees at two U-haul locations and two Budget Rental Truck locations in Las Vegas said they don’t recall Metro coming to their offices. U-haul, however, has around 50 locations in Las Vegas, which range from large stores with storage to one-man shops with just a couple of trucks. Budget has about four locations in Las Vegas.

Penske, which has seven locations in Las Vegas, could not confirm whether Metro had come by, said Randolph Ryerson, a Pennsylvan­ia-based spokesman for the truck rental company.

The FBI, the Department of Homeland Security and the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion produce and send out educationa­l materials outlining signs of suspicious behavior, such as cash payment or inability to recall the name on paperwork, to truck rental and storage company headquarte­rs.

Budget Truck Rental sent its Las Vegas locations that informatio­n months ago, local manager Alvin Dela Llana told the Review-journal on Friday. Home Depot is now distributi­ng similar literature to its regional offices, said spokesman Matthew Harrigan. A Home Depot rental truck was used in the attack in New York.

Penske, the truck rental company Safeguard works with, sent FBI and TSA literature to regional offices on Nov. 1, the day after the New York attack, said Van Camp.

“We regularly send out advisories to all of our employees in the truck business reminding them about security protection,” said Ryerson.

Hard to prevent

Yet security experts say it will still be very difficult to prevent someone from carrying out a truck ramming attack even with greater employee awareness.

“Are you going to discrimina­te? The answer is no. And how much grilling can you do’’ if someone comes in to rent a truck for yard renovation­s, asked Tommy Burns, a retired Henderson police chief and security consultant in Las Vegas. “I just don’t think there is a whole lot they can do.”

Las Vegas rental employees confirmed that it can be uncomforta­ble at times to confront customers who behave suspicious­ly. One employee recalled renting a truck to a person who seemed to be lying out of fear of being accused of racial profiling. The customer never returned the truck, the employee said.

The TSA acknowledg­es that truck ramming is tough to prevent and believes that it will remain an attack method of choice for terrorist organizati­ons.

“It is likely that terrorist groups will continue to encourage aspiring attackers to employ unsophisti­cated tactics such as vehicle-ramming since these minimize the potential for premature detection and could inflict mass fatalities if successful,” the TSA said in its education material.

Large outdoor gatherings, such as concerts or parades, are publicly announced well in advance, giving terrorists time to organize their truck attack, the TSA said.

Terrorists had carried out 17 known vehicle ramming attacks worldwide from 2014 through April 2017, killing 173 people and injuring 667, according to the TSA.

“Terrorism is in the mind. Until we can read minds, it will always be a threat,’’ said Van Camp.

Contact Todd Prince at 702-3830386 or tprince@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @toddprince­tv on Twitter. Contact Rio Lacanlale at rlacanlale@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0381. Follow @riolacanla­le on Twitter.

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