Los Angeles Times

‘El Chapo’ trial treated as a terrorist target

Security includes a National Guard team screening for threats including weapons of mass destructio­n.

- By Sonja Sharp Sharp is a special correspond­ent.

NEW YORK — At the downtown Brooklyn federal courthouse where Mexican drug kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman is on trial, New York Police Department snipers roam the rooftops and K-9 units prowl the halls.

The Brooklyn Bridge closes whenever the defendant is transporte­d to court from Manhattan, and even attorneys must take off their shoes at the new TSA-style checkpoint outside the courtroom.

With such a conspicuou­s show of force, it’s easy to overlook the two or three servicemen based at a small fold-out table near the X-ray machine in the lobby, quietly scanning the Eastern District of New York courthouse grounds for explosives, biological weapons and dirty bombs.

The soldiers and airmen are members of the National Guard’s 24th Weapons of Mass Destructio­n Civil Support Team — “Civil Support for short, so it’s less scary,” their spokesman said — an elite corps of threat specialist­s who headline counterter­rorism efforts at the city’s biggest events.

“They’ll be on duty for the Macy’s Thanksgivi­ng Day Parade,” Eric Durr, public affairs director for the Guard’s state division, said recently. “Anything that could possibly be considered some sort of target, we have one of our teams there.”

Members of the strike team stationed at the courthouse last week said they also provided security for the U.N. General Assembly, New Year’s Eve in Times Square and the U.S. Open tennis tournament in Queens.

It’s an interestin­g gig, though their service isn’t always appreciate­d.

“Two brown guys in backpacks — we get a lot of dirty looks,” said one Latino veteran of the war in Afghanista­n, who declined to give his name because he wasn’t authorized to speak to the media.

The Guzman trial, the guardsmen said, marked their first appearance in court.

“What they look for is something that’s really highprofil­e, something that gets a lot of media coverage,” said Andrew Karam, a New Yorkbased private radiologic­al security specialist who has worked alongside the military strike team for years. “Anyplace where you get a lot of people gathered in conjunctio­n with a lot of reporters and cameras, it starts looking more attractive to terrorists.”

Although Guzman himself is notorious, it’s the swarm of reporters lining up before dawn to secure a spot in the courtroom, and the flock of photograph­ers camped outside all day for a single snap of his former beauty queen wife, that make the otherwise unremarkab­le building a potential target, Karam said.

The strike team arrays rucksacks of gadgets around a small plastic banquet table just inside the building’s tall glass facade, on the edge of the security line. Each guardsman is armed with a mobile lab and a toolkit of futuristic sensors that scan for chemical, biological, radiologic­al and nuclear material, as well as explosives. Most of the scanning gear is so small it can slip inside a pocket, and so sensitive that the strike team can tell when a passerby is being treated for heart trouble or cancer.

“If you had a thyroid scan or a bone scan, we’d figure out it was you,” Karam said. “Thallium 201 — that’s usually used for doing heart scans. If I picked up Iodine 131, my first thought would be thyroid cancer.”

The machines are designed to detect nuclear waste and other radiologic­al threats, though Karam said he’s never found any in New York. Other parts of the kit are deployed to inspect suspicious powders or packages for biohazards. The team is also equipped to search for trace explosives from convention­al bombs.

All told, 11 of the 24th Civil Support team’s service members have been detailed to New York’s Eastern District for the trial, which is expected to continue for four months. That’s a small fraction of the law enforcemen­t officers who have descended on the courthouse since the trial began this month.

Rifle-toting NYPD snipers can be seen from the hallway outside District Judge Brian Cogan’s courtroom, but the department declined to comment on its presence, saying the U.S. Marshals Service was coordinati­ng security.

“The U.S. Marshals are responsibl­e for the protection of the federal judicial process, and we take that responsibi­lity very seriously,” the agency said in an email. “While we do not discuss our specific security measures, we continuous­ly review the security measures in place and take appropriat­e steps to provide additional protection when it is warranted.”

The Department of Homeland Security also has jurisdicti­on over the courthouse, but its authority more or less starts at the sidewalk and ends at the door, Federal Protective Service spokesman Robert Sperling said.

Exactly how many officers, and what types, are required to secure the trial of the world’s most famous drug trafficker is a closely held secret, he said.

“We don’t really talk about numbers or what our tactics or procedures are,” Sperling said. “When it comes to security, we really don’t talk about what it takes to make the sausage.”

 ?? Drew Angerer Getty Images ?? A U.S. MARSHAL patrols with a dog outside the courthouse recently. Inside, National Guard specialist­s scan for a wide variety of threats.
Drew Angerer Getty Images A U.S. MARSHAL patrols with a dog outside the courthouse recently. Inside, National Guard specialist­s scan for a wide variety of threats.

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