The Truth Behind the Title: Behavior Detection
Officer
Ever get the feeling you’re being watched? Usually it’s just nerves
or a good dose of electromagnetic energy, but if you’re traveling
through a TSA checkpoint, chances are there are several sets of eyes on
you. What are they looking at? Is your hair messed up? Looking flustered
after problems at the ticket counter? Have toilet paper stuck to the
bottom of your shoe? No. You’re being watched by Behavior Detection
Officers, or BDOs in government acronym-speak.
The program was designed by
Paul Ekman (PhD),
a psychology professor at the University of California Medical School,
San Francisco. He’s been studying behavioral analysis for the past 40
years and has taught the TSA, Customs and Border Protection, CIA, FBI
and other federal agencies to watch for suspicious facial expressions of
tension, fear or deception. He has even taught animators at Disney-Pixar
to create convincing faces for film characters. After passing along his
skills to US Customs, their “hit rate” for finding drugs during
passenger searches rose to
22.5
percent from 4.2 percent in 1998.
Behavior analysis is based on the fear of being discovered. People
who are trying to get away with something display signs of stress
through involuntary physical and physiological behaviors. Whether
someone’s trying to sneak through that excellent stone ground mustard
they bought on vacation, a knife, or a bomb, behavior detection officers
like me are trained to spot certain suspicious behaviors out of the
crowd.
Just recently at the Cincinnati Northern Kentucky International
Airport, (CVG) two of my fellow BDOs spotted behaviors on a passenger
and conducted secondary screening. They were unaware at the time the
individual was an undercover “passenger” involved in covert testing. The
concealed item was an unassembled weapon in a carry-on bag. The BDOs
caught this right away, and when the testing was over, it was revealed
that the passenger also had plastic explosive simulants in the cups of
her bra. This was an excellent catch, and proof the behavior detection
program works. If this were the real thing, we would have caught it.
Between July 1, 2007 and February 7, 2008, 514 people were arrested
after being referred for additional screening or directly to law
enforcement officers by behavior detection officers. The arrests include
unlawfully carrying concealed firearms or other weapons, possession of
fraudulent documents, transporting undeclared currency, possessing
illegal drugs, immigration law violations, and outstanding warrants.
Some will say that it shouldn’t be TSA’s job to look for drugs, or
money - our job is airport security. But when we spot someone behaving
suspiciously, we don’t know what they have; all we know is they’re
behaving in a way that says they might pose a threat. In many cases, we
find things that might have otherwise gotten through security (money,
drugs) and that’s a good sign because it could just as easily been
plastic or liquid explosives. The behaviors these drug and currency
smugglers exhibit are the same behaviors we expect a terrorist to
exhibit.
In the ABC interview below, former United Airlines ticketing agent
Mike Tuohey discusses gut feelings he had about behaviors Mohamed Atta
and Abdulaziz al-Omari were displaying on 9/11.
At a time when almost anything can be made into a weapon, it’s
important to focus on the people with intent to do harm, not just on the
items they might use.
(This text was emailed to us for for publication).
Email me at
webmaster@tsalga.com if you have any
suggestions or comments.