Las Vegas Review-Journal

Mccarran airport testing new 3D security scanner

Project work in progress; few specifics

- By Mick Akers Las Vegas Review-journal

Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport is the latest facility to test a new 3D security scanner aimed at enhancing the screening process — but officials are being mum about the devices.

The computer tomography (CT) scanner installed in Terminal 3 has the ability to detect for explosives and other threats by creating a 3D image that can be rotated for increased analysis by Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion X-ray operators, according to a TSA press release issued in September 2018 when Oakland Internatio­nal Airport received the scanners.

If a bag requires further attention, TSA officers will inspect it to ensure that an unlawful item is not contained inside, the release stated.

While the machines have been installed at Mccarran and are in limited use, airport and TSA officials declined to discuss them.

TSA spokeswome­n Lorie Dankers said the project is a work in progress and specific informatio­n was not readily available.

“What is being installed at Mccarran is part of a larger project that is in its early stages,” Dankers said. “This technology has not been widely deployed in the security checkpoint­s at LAS (Mccarran) and there are no plans for it to be widely deployed in the near future.”

Rosemary Vassiliadi­s, director of the County Department of Aviation, touched on the new scanners in her presentati­on to the Legislatur­e earlier this year

“A separate checkpoint set up in Terminal 3, in a separate little area,” Vassiliadi­s said in February. “We’re going to open that up to the public and be able to determine together as a partnershi­p, the airport and the TSA, what’s going to work the best, so we have the best and highest security at the airport.”

During her presentati­on, Vassiliadi­s said Mccarran was set to test four of the 3D scanners at the Terminal 3 security checkpoint.

Mccarran is one of 15 airports nationwide where the TSA is testing out the new technology for security checkpoint­s.

The technology is similar to CT technology used in the medical field, according to the TSA.

The TSA already uses CT technology to screen checked baggage and is

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just starting to incorporat­e it at the security checkpoint. The scanning technology can detect shapes and densities of items including bulk and liquid explosives that could be a threat to commercial aviation.

The new technology could lead to passengers being allowed to carry on larger containers of liquid than the current 3.4 ounces and to keep their electronic­s in their bags at a checkpoint.

Mccarran is a designated Innovation Task Force site where new technology is deployed and tested before it’s expanded and used nationwide.

One of the first big projects carried out through the TSA innovation initiative at Mccarran was the installati­on of automated screening lanes.

The automated lanes are installed in three of the four TSA checkpoint­s at Mccarran and were first installed in 2017. There are currently 18 automated screening lanes in use at Mccarran, with six in Terminal 3, six at the C Annex and six at the C and D gate checkpoint.

Automated screening lanes can process passengers 20 percent to 30 percent faster than the traditiona­l method used at most airports, according to Mccarran officials.

Contact Mick Akers at makers@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-2920. Follow @mickakers on Twitter.

 ?? Anastasia Hendrix Las Vegas Review-journal ?? Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport is the latest facility to test a new 3D security scanner aimed at enhancing the screening process.
Anastasia Hendrix Las Vegas Review-journal Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport is the latest facility to test a new 3D security scanner aimed at enhancing the screening process.
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