March 29, 2006
Undercover Team Smuggled Radioactive Materials into U.S. to Test Border
Security
By Kevin Diaz
McClatchy Newspapers
Washington, DC (SHNS) -- Undercover federal investigators say they were
able to drive into the United States from Canada and Mexico last year with
enough radioactive material in the trunks of their rented cars to build two
"dirty bombs."
The "red team" exercises, conducted simultaneously on Dec. 14, 2005 at two
unidentified border crossings, were carried out by the Government
Accountability Office at the behest of the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on
Investigations, which has been analyzing security at ports and border
crossings over the past three years.
Committee chairman Norm Coleman, R-MN, who is holding two hearings this week
on the findings, issued a statement Monday critical of the Department of
Homeland Security and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Particularly alarming, Coleman said, was the investigators' ability to buy
radioactive materials in the United States by telephone without any
government licenses, and then exit and re-enter the country with fake NRC
documents and bills of lading.
"This operation demonstrated that the Nuclear Regulatory Commission is stuck
in a pre-9/11 mindset in a post-9/11 world and must modernize its
procedures," said Coleman.
NRC officials disputed that the amount of radioactive material purchased for
the investigation was cause for alarm.
"You can basically blow up a smoke detector and say you're spreading
radioactivity, because there's an americium chip inside," said NRC spokesman
David McIntyre. "But it wouldn't make a very effective dirty bomb."
Investigators for the GAO, the investigative arm of Congress, did not
disclose how much or exactly what kind of radioactive material was used in
the investigation, nor what states they crossed into in their rented cars.
Their report says they used the National Institute of Standards and
Technology's threshold for the amount of radioactive material needed to make
a dirty bomb.
Two senior committee staffers said the only good news from the episode was
that new radiation detection devices now being used at most overland border
crossing functioned properly and alerted U.S. Customs and Border officials.
The bad news is that the border officials let the cars pass through after
inspecting their doctored paperwork.
Worse, the investigators said, similar radiation detection equipment is
currently being used to check less than 40 percent of maritime containers at
the nation's seaports.
The findings were contained in three GAO reports released Monday calling
into question the nation's efforts to combat potential nuclear smuggling by
terrorists.
One of the GAO reports pointed to the slow progress in deploying radiation
detection equipment to the nation's sea terminals, concluding that it is
"unlikely" the Bush administration will meet its goal of installing the
equipment in all the nation's ports by September 2009.
Another report questioned the government's efforts to track and monitor $178
million in radiation detection equipment provided to Russia and 35 other
shipping nations. The report's authors singled out Russia as a particular
concern because of allegations of widespread corruption by border security
officials there.
But the most controversial finding came out of the GAO's undercover
operation transporting radioactive material across the nation's northern and
southern borders.
GAO investigators posing as employees of a fictitious Washington, D.C.,
company said they were able to buy radioactive material by telephone and
have it mailed to them at an address in the nation's capital.
"This was to demonstrate that anyone can purchase small quantities of
radioactive sources for stockpiling because suppliers are not required to
exercise any due diligence in determining whether the buyer has a legitimate
use for the radioactive sources," the report said. "Suppliers are not
required to ask the buyer to produce a (NRC) document when making purchases
in small quantities."
NRC officials said radioactive materials are commonly shipped commercially
in the United States for a variety of medical, scientific and industrial
applications, including the manufacture of household smoke alarms.
Most of the licenses needed for such transactions are now issued by states,
McIntyre said.
McIntyre said the NRC is concerned that the investigators were able to forge
NRC documents authorizing the transfer of radioactive materials by using
documents easily available to the public on the Internet.
Customs and Border Protection officials in the Department of Homeland
Security told committee investigators that they are working on ways to
verify NRC licensing documents at the borders.
McIntyre said the NRC also has efforts underway to make that "difficult, if
not impossible," to counterfeit its documents.
Hearings Tuesday, March 28 and Thursday, March 30, 2006 in Congress are
likely to focus on the "concern threshold" for when the states and the
federal government must license the sale and transportation of radioactive
materials.
Coleman, faulting the NRC for a pre-9/11 mindset, said "it is easier to buy
low-grade radioactive material for a dirty bomb than it is to buy cold
medicine that has been restricted because of the meth epidemic."
McIntyre said the NRC's standards are in keeping with the times.
"We were working on the security of radioactive materials before 9/11 and
we've been working much harder since 9/11," he said. "It is of prime
importance to us 24-7."
Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service.






