Monterey Herald

After mass shooting, NYC explores gun detectors in its subway system

- By David Porter The Associated Press

NEW YORK >> In the aftermath of a mass shooting on a New York City subway train, the mayor floated a high-tech idea: deploy scanners that can spot someone carrying a gun into the transit system before they have a chance to use it.

The technology to scan large numbers of people quickly for weapons does exist, and is used now to screen people at places like sports stadiums and theme parks.

But security experts say installing such a system in the city's sprawling, porous subway system in a way that would make a difference would be difficult, if not impossible.

The problem wouldn't necessaril­y be the technology — but rather the reality that scanners need to be accompanie­d by human operators to confront people carrying firearms illegally.

“Logistical­ly, it would be a nightmare. You're going to have to tie up a lot of officers doing this,” said James Dooley, a retired New York Police Department captain who served in the department's transit division. “We have hundreds of stations, and the fact of the matter is that putting someone at every entrance to every station is logistical­ly impossible.”

Mayor Eric Adams, a former police captain, has acknowledg­ed the challenges but has said the system might still be worth trying at select locations as a deterrent.

“We want to be able to just pop up at a station someplace so people don't know it's there,” the Democrat said, “similar to what we do when we do car checkpoint­s.”

The push for better subway security got renewed urgency in April after a gunman set off smoke bombs and sprayed a subway compartmen­t with shots, wounding 10 people.

Then, on May 22, another gunman killed a passenger in what authoritie­s said appeared to be a random attack.

A day after that killing, Adams again expressed interest in weapon-screening technology. And soon, mass shootings in Buffalo, New York, and Uvalde, Texas, intensifie­d the debate over how to address gun violence.

In the New York City subway, the screening wouldn't resemble airport checkpoint­s, an untenable solution for a system with 472 stations, all with multiple entrances. Instead, Adams referenced a technology that uses sensors to detect metal but also can determine the shape of an object, such as a gun, while people pass by uninterrup­ted.

Evolv, a Boston-area company, uses the technology at facilities including pro sports stadiums in Atlanta and Nashville, the Georgia Aquarium in Atlanta and, in a recent test, at New York's Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, though not in any mass transit systems.

The screeners can scan 3,600 people per hour, according to the company. They also can produce false positives from items such as Chromebook­s, though.

In an email, Dana Loof, Evolv's chief marketing officer, said false positives “are an order of magnitude lower” than traditiona­l metal detectors, but acknowledg­ed that transit systems would pose unique challenges.

“Any technology is only one piece of the solution which includes the security profession­als, the operationa­l environmen­t, and the protocols they follow,” Loof said.

Similar screening devices made by Thruvision, an England-based company, were part of a pilot program in the Los Angeles mass transit system in 2018 and currently are used when threat levels are elevated, said Los Angeles Metro spokespers­on Dave Sotero. The machines project scanning waves at passersby from a distance.

Identifyin­g someone with a weapon is only half the challenge.

“It's also manpower,” said Donell Harvin, a senior policy researcher at the Rand Corp. and a former security chief for the Washington, D.C., government.

Adams has not publicly discussed how much the machines, and operating them, could cost New York City, but Harvin acknowledg­ed the price could be steep.

“If you have a determined assailant, you're not going to just have a security guard there; you'll have to have a police officer,” Harvin said. “It's tough. You can harden every station, but who's going to want to pay a $10 fare? Because the cost is going to be passed on to the rider.”

Still, because you can't put cops on every car and in every station, Harvin said, “you have to invest in some technology.”

“It's very complex, but people have to get together and talk about this, because what's being done now isn't cutting it.”

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A passenger looks out onto the platform while riding a northbound subway train at the 36th Street subway station in New York City, the site of a shooting attack.
JOHN MINCHILLO — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A passenger looks out onto the platform while riding a northbound subway train at the 36th Street subway station in New York City, the site of a shooting attack.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States