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TSA Awards Contract for Controversial Screening Program 

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by Christian B. Sheehy 

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security is funding a program that could help identify potential terrorists before they are permitted to fly. The program, called the Computer Assisted Passenger Pre-Screening System (CAPPS), if implemented, would use public source information from airline reservations to profile a passenger’s background in areas such as citizenship status, travel habits and criminal history.

Prior to boarding, a color code of green, yellow, or red would be issued for each traveler, designating them as a low, medium, or high threat to airline security.

“Using public domain information, the system would only examine data pertinent to the computation of threat probability. Assuming no adverse information is found, all data collected on an individual flyer would be erased from memory within 24 hours of flight arrival,” said a DHS official.

After the 2002 Aviation Transportation Security Act passed, the TSA began reviewing a “watch list” of individuals the U.S. government has categorized as a risk to transportation or national security.

Despite the ongoing congressional debate over public privacy issues, the TSA awarded Lockheed Martin Management and Data Systems an initial five-year task order contract for $12.8 million to assist in the development of a CAPPS II technology infrastructure.

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