Daily Press

Audit: TSA kept monitoring some travelers for no reason

- By Hugo Martín

A controvers­ial U.S. program to monitor “highrisk” passengers at airports and on domestic flights has been poorly managed, with some fliers continuing to be monitored after they were no longer considered a risk, a government audit found.

The Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion failed to “plan, implement, and manage the Quiet Skies program to meet the program’s mission of mitigating the threat to commercial aviation,” the Office of Inspector General for the Department of Homeland Security said in its audit, released last week.

The TSA agreed with some of the recommenda­tions to improve oversight to the Quiet Skies program but rejected the conclusion that the agency failed to follow its own guidelines and that it has not shown that the program makes air travel safer.

In a letter filed in response to the audit, TSA Administra­tor David Pekoske said 58 travelers who were initially monitored under the Quiet Skies program from 2014 to 2020 were eventually labeled as

“known or suspected terrorists” and added to the government’s no-fly terrorist watch list.

“This data indicates that the Quiet Skies selectees are approximat­ely 30 times more likely to pose an actual high risk than a randomly selected passenger, validating Quiet Skies’ value in identifyin­g highrisk travel,” he said.

The program was launched in 2012 but was first reported by the Boston Globe in 2018. An audit was launched shortly after the program was publicized. The TSA has described the program as an effort to prevent terrorism by conducting extra screening at TSA checkpoint­s of U.S. citizens who have broken no laws but raise red flags because of their travel patterns.

Through an automated system, airlines add a special coding to the boarding passes of passengers who are on the Quiet Skies list so TSA officers can pull those travelers aside for extra screening at security checkpoint­s.

In addition, federal air marshals who monitor the travelers board the same flight and keep notes if those passengers are fidgeting, sweating, trembling, staring or exhibiting other suspicious behavior, according to the TSA.

The Quiet Skies program operates separately from the federal government watch list that is intended to monitor known or suspected terrorists.

Civil rights groups such as the Council on American-Islamic Relations have criticized the program, saying that it may be singling out law-abiding travelers based on race or religion for harassment — an allegation the TSA has rejected.

Gadeir Abbas, senior litigation attorney for CAIR, said the audit uses “the sharpest language you can see in an OIG report, which speaks to the senselessn­ess of it all.”

Despite the audit’s recommenda­tions, he said, “there is no fixing this nonsense. TSA should end Quiet Skies once and for all.”

The audit said the program failed to adopt procedures to measure if the program has been effective at keeping the skies safe and recommende­d creating a central office to monitor and manage the program, with quarterly reports and regular performanc­e goals.

 ?? ELLEN M. BANNER/SEATTLE TIMES ?? Fliers go through security at Seattle-Tacoma Internatio­nal Airport in Washington state.
ELLEN M. BANNER/SEATTLE TIMES Fliers go through security at Seattle-Tacoma Internatio­nal Airport in Washington state.

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