An Air Marshal Victory for all of US
Kudos to Federal Air Marshal Frank Terreri and ACLU in Southern California for prevailing in litigation concerning whether air marshals can alert the public of safety and security concerns. They reached an agreement with the Department of Homeland Security, in which, according to the press release, “the government has agreed to send an e-mail within the week to all federal air marshals clarifying its policy on what marshals can say publicly. In particular, the message will clarify the meaning of two policies that Federal Air Marshal Frank Terreri argued were unconstitutionally vague.”
Thanks too to Air Marshal Alert for letting us know the good news.
UPDATE: This just in from Air Marshal Alert -- Terreri takes the investigation to the next level and files with the Office of Special Counsel (OSC) to get an investigation started on the Air Marshal Service.
FEDERAL LAW
ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS ASSOCIATION
P.O. Box
326 , Lewisberry PA 17339
(717)
938-2300 Fax (717) 932-2262 www.FLEOA.org
- PRESS
RELEASE -
Legal Petition with the
U.S.
for Investigation of
the Federal Air Marshal Service
(PRWEB) April 19, 2006 -- Federal Air
Marshal Frank Terreri today filed a formal legal petition with the U.S. Office
of Special Counsel (OSC) for investigation of the Federal Air Marshal Service
(FAMS).
In his 13-page appeal, Terreri alleges gross
mismanagement, abuse of authority, violations of law, and a substantial threat
to air safety, created by repeated disclosures of operational tactics and FAMS
policies that compromise the identity of individual air
marshals.
Mr. Terreri is counter-attacking against
bureaucratic negligence within the air marshal service that creates a danger to
the flying public, commentedGAP Advocacy
Associate Adam Miles. His law enforcement expertise has been ignored for over
two years, while FAMS management has taken repeated steps to harass Terreri into
silence.
In filing with OSC, Terreri commented, It
is my hope that this whistleblower disclosure to the Office of Special Counsel
will bring attention to significant aviation terrorism vulnerabilities and more
importantly, facilitate necessary improvements that will allow FAMS to better
fulfill its mission to protect the flying public and be an effective deterrent
to terrorism.
After an initial review, the Special
Counsel can order the Secretary of Homeland Security to investigate and report
on Terreris disclosures. Terreri would then have the opportunity to comment on
the agencys report, before it was sent to the President and congressional
oversight committees.
In addition to disclosures on operational
safety, Terreri
is challenging air marshal managements endorsement of at least six national news
segments that revealed the exact weapon air marshals use on flights and the
methods agents use to respond to a
hijacking.
Terreri repeatedly warned that the impact
of disclosing this information publicly gives terrorists a greater tactical
advantage in a setting already tipped in their
favor.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
issued a disturbing corroboration of Terreris concerns in a March 28 law
enforcement memorandum to the Department of Homeland
Security.
According to a press account on the memo
in the Federal Times, A convicted terrorist with links to al-Qaida told the FBI
he used a television news report on air marshal training to assemble a
theoretical strike plan, demonstrating that would-be hijackers with similar
information could use it to overpower marshalsThe terrorist, who has been in
U.S. custody for several years and is described in the FBI cable as a reliable
informant, evidently gave his plan only to the FBI and not to other terrorists.
He told the FBI that active terrorists could have easily assembled a similar
plan based on what was broadcast.
Terreri notes that FAMS
management has been criminally negligent in dismissing similar warnings
from him and hundreds of air marshals since the first FAMS-endorsed disclosures
of operational procedures aired in 2004. In
responding to the FBI memo, agency spokesman David Adams told United Press
International, We're not concerned about the
report.
The administration is setting a dangerous
double standard on leaks of information to the press, commented GAP Legal
Director Tom Devine. While gagging its air marshals, the
administration is broadcasting security breaches that endanger flights all
for bureaucratic self-promotion. This is
inexcusable.
Terreri summarized his concerns in the
following statement:
The American Public deserves an honest
account of whats happening within the Federal Air Marshal program and why air
marshal management is compromising public safety. The story needs to be told by
actual Federal Air Marshals, not by Federal Air Marshal managers, who have never
performed the duties of a Federal Air
Marshal.
The bottom line is that
the Federal Air Marshal Program has been grossly mismanaged since the
number of Federal Air Marshals was drastically increased following the 9/11
terrorist attacks. Federal Air Marshal Management has
consistently implemented deadly policies that compromise the anonymity of
Federal Air Marshals and jeopardize the integrity of Aviation Security. In
addition to these deadly policies, Federal Air Marshal Management has directly
retaliated against any Federal Air Marshal who exposed any deficiencies with
current policies.
In the recent past, Federal Air Marshal
Management has chosen to disclose and disseminate sensitive and classified
information concerning the methodologies, operational concepts, mission
deployments, and other activities of the Federal Air Marshal Service. This was
done on several occasions utilizing many media outlets (i.e. People, Time, CNN,
ABC, NBC, etc.) This release of sensitive and classified
information jeopardizes the Federal Air Marshal Mission, Federal Air Marshal
Personnel, the security of our country and the safety of the flying
public.
Federal Air Marshal Management contends
that this sensitive and classified information was disclosed as a "deterrent" to
any terrorists contemplating a future hi-jacking. It refuses to back down from
this rationale, despite years of warnings from hundreds of individual air
marshals and new, disturbing evidence of the dangers this policy has
created.
The FBI recently released a memorandum
that appeared in several media venues that exposed the fact that an Al Qaeda
terrorist (now in custody and serving as a reliable informant) had scrutinized
the aforementioned media programs that featured the detailed descriptions of
Federal Air Marshal Operations. The captured terrorist informed the FBI that
directly due to the operational details disclosed on these television programs
by Federal Air Marshal Management, he easily formulated a plan of attack that
would neutralize Federal Air Marshals and allow terrorists to successfully
hi-jack an airliner.
One would expect that Federal Air Marshal
Management would be deeply disturbed by this FBI report and, without delay,
implement procedures that would thwart any planned attack that could have been
formulated from disclosed operational procedures. Instead, Federal Air Marshal Spokesperson
Dave Adams dismissed the alarming FBI report with the following statement,
"This report doesn't concern
us."
The American Public needs a better
response to terrorism. The American Public needs to realize that Aviation
Security is no better today that it was prior to 9/11. Federal Air Marshal
Management has essentially provided fanatical terrorist groups with step by step
instructions on how to successfully identify and defeat Federal Air
Marshals.
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