mmm boy does this make me feel secure!

conjur

No Lifer
Jun 7, 2001
58,686
3
0
Guards Fault Homeland Security Protection
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/co...cle/2006/03/06/AR2006030600154_pf.html
WASHINGTON -- The agency entrusted with protecting the U.S. homeland is having difficulty safeguarding its own headquarters, say private security guards at the complex.

The guards have taken their concerns to Congress, describing inadequate training, failed security tests and slow or confused reactions to bomb and biological threats.

For instance, when an envelope with suspicious powder was opened last fall at Homeland Security Department headquarters, guards said they watched in amazement as superiors carried it by the office of Secretary Michael Chertoff, took it outside and then shook it outside Chertoff's window without evacuating people nearby.

The scare, caused by white powder that proved to be harmless, "stands as one glaring example" of the agency's security problems, said Derrick Daniels, one of the first guards to respond to the incident.

"I had never previously been given training ... describing how to respond to a possible chemical attack," Daniels told The Associated Press. "I wouldn't feel safe nowhere on this compound as an officer."

Daniels was employed until last fall by Wackenhut Services Inc., the private security firm that guards Homeland's headquarters in a residential area of Washington. The company has been criticized previously for its work at nuclear facilities and transporting nuclear weapons.

Homeland Security officials say they have little control over Wackenhut's training of guards but plan to improve that with a new contract. The company defends its performance, saying the suspicious powder incident was overblown because the mail had already been irradiated.

Two senators who fielded complaints from several Wackenhut employees are asking Homeland's internal watchdog, the inspector general, to investigate.

"If the allegations brought forward by the whistleblowers are correct, they represent both a security threat and a waste of taxpayer dollars," Democratic Sens. Byron Dorgan of North Dakota and Ron Wyden of Oregon wrote. "It would be ironic, to say the least, if DHS were unable to secure its own headquarters."

Daniels left Wackenhut and now works security for another company at another federal building. He is among 14 current and former Wackenhut employees _ mostly guards _ who were interviewed by The Associated Press or submitted written statements to Congress that were obtained by AP.

A litany of problems were listed by the guards, whose pay ranges from $15.60 to $23 an hour based on their position and level of security clearance. Among their examples of lax security:

_They have no training in responding to attacks with weapons of mass destruction;

_Chemical-sniffing dogs have been replaced with ineffective equipment that falsely indicates the presence of explosives.

_Vehicle entrances to Homeland Security's complex are lightly guarded;

_Guards with radios have trouble hearing each other, or have no radios, no batons and no pepper spray, leaving them with few options beyond lethal force with their handguns.

Wackenhut President Dave Foley disputed the allegations, saying officers have a minimum of one year's security experience, proper security clearances and training in vehicle screening, identification of personnel, handling of suspicious items and emergency response.

"In short, we believe our security personnel have been properly trained, have responded correctly to the various incidents that have occurred ... and that this facility is secure," he said. He declined, however, to address any of the current or former employees who have become whistleblowers.

Wackenhut is no stranger to criticism.

Over the last two years, the Energy Department inspector general concluded that Wackenhut guards had thwarted simulated terrorist attacks at a nuclear lab only after they were tipped off to the test; and that guards also had improperly handled the transport of nuclear and conventional weapons.

Homeland Security is based at a gated, former Navy campus in a college neighborhood _ several miles from the heavily trafficked streets that house the FBI, Capitol, Treasury Department and White House.

Homeland Security spokesman Brian Doyle said Wackenhut guards are still operating under a contract signed with the Navy, and the agency has little control over their training. A soon-to-be-implemented replacement contract will impose new requirements on security guards, he said.

Daniels, the former guard who responded to the white powder incident, said the area where the powder was found wasn't evacuated for more than an hour. Available biohazard face shields went unused.

Doyle said the concerns were overblown because all mail going to the Homeland Security complex is irradiated to kill anthrax. He said "the incident was resolved before anything was moved."

Daniels said that after the envelope was taken outside, and the order finally given to evacuate the potentially infected area, employees had already gone to lunch and had to be rounded up and quarantined.


Former guard Bryan Adams recognized his inadequate training one day last August, when an employee reported a suspicious bag in the parking lot.

"I didn't have a clue about what to do," he said.

Adams said he closed the vehicle checkpoint with a cone, walked over to the bag and called superiors. Nobody cordoned off the area. Eventually, someone called a federal bomb squad, which arrived more than an hour after the discovery.

"If the bag had, in fact, contained the explosive device that was anticipated, the bomb could have detonated several times over in the hour that the bag sat there," Adams said.

The bag, it turned out, contained gym clothes.

...
More at the link.


Doesn't that make ya just all warm and fuzzy that our government can protect us from those vile evil-doers? I feel like a bug all snug in a rug.

And just think, this is the same dept. that functioned so well during the Katrina and Rita aftermath.


Ahhh...ze homeland. So secure.
 

maddogchen

Diamond Member
Feb 17, 2004
8,903
2
76
Not really, i've seen trained professionals panic before. working at a hospital, 3 doctors eating in the break room, one all of a sudden down with a allergic reaction to peanuts in something he ate. The other two doctors look at each other and say something along the lines of oh crap what do we do?

 

CaptnKirk

Lifer
Jul 25, 2002
10,053
0
71
Thank God that they were able to get rid of all that suspicious white powder before Dubya ran in and snorted it all :shocked:
 

ntdz

Diamond Member
Aug 5, 2004
6,989
0
0
Originally posted by: CaptnKirk
Thank God that they were able to get rid of all that suspicious white powder before Dubya ran in and snorted it all :shocked:

Aren't you funny...
 

judasmachine

Diamond Member
Sep 15, 2002
8,515
3
81
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: CaptnKirk
Thank God that they were able to get rid of all that suspicious white powder before Dubya ran in and snorted it all :shocked:

Aren't you funny...

It was humorous, lighten up guy. :)

If you had said, "thank god they got rid of that suspicious intern chic before Clinton ran in and ........" I'd have laughed too.

OT though, It does seem a bit unprofessional. Perhaps some 'get back to basics' training is in order.
 

Isla

Elite member
Sep 12, 2000
7,749
2
0
I think it is a huge issue and it surprises me that Bush loyalists don't see it as such. I mean, the whole idea of re-electing him was to keep us safe from the evil doers, right? So shouldn't we be improving in these areas? Maybe there should be an FCAT for Homeland Security.

:confused:
 

1EZduzit

Lifer
Feb 4, 2002
11,833
1
0
For instance, when an envelope with suspicious powder was opened last fall at Homeland Security Department headquarters, guards said they watched in amazement as superiors carried it by the office of Secretary Michael Chertoff, took it outside and then shook it outside Chertoff's window without evacuating people nearby.

I'm sure Chertoff's eyes have been equipped with some sort of bionic spectroscope that enabled him to determine it was just baby powder.
 

techs

Lifer
Sep 26, 2000
28,559
4
0
The real problem is the Bush administration is completely inept at the day to day operations of running the government.
Not surprising when you put political appointees without qualifications in positions to administer programs they are determined to destroy.
Doesn't exactly entice the best administrators, does it?
 

CaptnKirk

Lifer
Jul 25, 2002
10,053
0
71
Originally posted by: ntdz
Originally posted by: CaptnKirk
Thank God that they were able to get rid of all that suspicious white powder before Dubya ran in and snorted it all :shocked:

Aren't you funny...

Bubba - I'm more 'witty' that your mindless, pointed, pinhead views.

And I personally find that to be very amusing - and you pathetic.


And ILSA:

I think it is a huge issue and it surprises me that Bush loyalists don't see it as such. I mean, the whole idea of re-electing him was to keep us safe from the evil doers, right? So shouldn't we be improving in these areas? Maybe there should be an FCAT for Homeland Security

That in itself proves that the whole 'Bush Security' this is a ruse, a house of cards that doesn't hold up to the light of day.
Just like turning over the port control to a FOREIGN GOVERNMENT - this is not just a foreign owned business here,
it's a FOREIGN BUSINESS OWNED BY A FOREIGN GOVERNMENT.
Like who in their right minds would be content in allowing the Chinese Communists or the Russian Communist Governments
to be running business enterprises on the US Continental soil during a war condition.

UAE is still bankrolling Hamas, and boycotting Israel - smart struff from our Administration, no ?

 

Connoisseur

Platinum Member
Sep 14, 2002
2,470
1
81
Ha ha, here's another egg in the face for the current government:

Brian J. Doyle Arrested

Coupled with the attempted murder by Cheney and Delay's resignation this really makes me chuckle. This has nothing to do with Bush, just the fact that the people in his administration seem to all be felons.
 

dmcowen674

No Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
54,889
47
91
www.alienbabeltech.com
Originally posted by: Connoisseur
Ha ha, here's another egg in the face for the current government:

Brian J. Doyle Arrested

Coupled with the attempted murder by Cheney and Delay's resignation this really makes me chuckle. This has nothing to do with Bush, just the fact that the people in his administration seem to all be felons.

So much for the 'Morality" Police
 

Connoisseur

Platinum Member
Sep 14, 2002
2,470
1
81
Heh yup... whoops looks like someone beat me to the punch by like 6 minutes. My apologies. The poo flinging can continue in the other thread.
 

Theb

Diamond Member
Feb 28, 2006
3,533
9
76
Originally posted by: dmcowen674
Originally posted by: Connoisseur
Ha ha, here's another egg in the face for the current government:

Brian J. Doyle Arrested

Coupled with the attempted murder by Cheney and Delay's resignation this really makes me chuckle. This has nothing to do with Bush, just the fact that the people in his administration seem to all be felons.

So much for the 'Morality" Police

They're worried about other people's morality, not their own.
 

arsbanned

Banned
Dec 12, 2003
4,853
0
0
Most crooked, corrupt administration in U.S. history. So much for "restoring integrity and honor" to Washington.
 

Mursilis

Diamond Member
Mar 11, 2001
7,756
11
81
Originally posted by: Connoisseur
Ha ha, here's another egg in the face for the current government:

Brian J. Doyle Arrested

Coupled with the attempted murder by Cheney and Delay's resignation this really makes me chuckle. This has nothing to do with Bush, just the fact that the people in his administration seem to all be felons.

Yes, they're all felons - all of them. :roll:
This is why Democrats don't win elections. Which is sad, because a competent opposition party would've been useful the last 6 years. Too bad there wasn't one.

By the way, there's already another thread. Or does your need for Bush-bashing exempt you from the search function?