Previously undisclosed TSA program tracks unsuspecting passengers
KUSI News reached out to the TSA covering San Diego and this was their response:
“The purpose of this program is to ensure passengers and flight crew are protected during air travel. Contrary to the article “Welcome to the Quiet Skies” published by The Boston Globe,” the program doesn’t take into account race and religion, and it is not intended to surveil ordinary Americans. In the world of law enforcement, this program’s core design is no different than putting a police officer on a beat where intelligence and other information presents the need for watch and deterrence. The program analyzes information on a passenger’s travel patterns, and through a system of checks and balances, to include robust oversight, effectively adds an additional line of defense to aviation security. With routine reviews and active management via legal, privacy and civil rights and liberties offices, the program is a practical method of keeping another act of terrorism from occurring at 30,000 feet.
Lorie Dankers
Spokeswoman & Public Affairs Manager
Transportation Security Administration | U.S. Department of Homeland Security
In a previously undisclosed Transportation Security Administration program, federal air marshals are tracking American citizens not suspected of a crime, not under investigation or who are not on any terrorist watch list.
The aim of the program, known as “Quiet Skies,” is to gather details about the peoples’ behavior on the plane to try to thwart any potential aviation threats, the Boston Globe first reported and a TSA official confirmed.
Before people board a plane, TSA officials use information from the intelligence community and their previous travel patterns to help choose whom to target, according to the TSA official. The official added the program has been in existence in some form since 2010, and said Congress is aware and provides “robust” oversight.
Thousands of unsuspecting Americans have been the target of surveillance in the airport and aboard flights by small teams of air marshals, according to government documents obtained by the Boston Globe. According to the Globe, officials look for such behaviors in those who are under surveillance as being abnormally aware of surroundings; exhibiting behavioral indicators such as excessive fidgeting, excessive perspiration, rapid eye blinking, rubbing or wringing of hands; with an appearance that was different than information provided; or if the person slept during the flight.
The TSA said the program is not targeting ordinary Americans. “The program absolutely isn’t intended to surveil ordinary Americans. Instead, its purpose is to ensure passengers and flight crew are protected during air travel — no different than putting a police officer on a beat where intelligence and information presents the need for increased watch and deterrence. The program analyzes information on a passenger’s travel patterns while taking the whole picture into account and adds an additional line of defense to aviation security,” the agency said in a statement.
An air marshal source said some marshals have concerns about the program, saying focusing on passengers who “look suspicious” pulls the marshals away from their mission of protecting the cockpit because they are keeping up surveillance of the individual. That means rearranging marshals’ seating and how they are deployed, meaning which flights they are on.
Marshals observe the people for behavioral cues that officials have previously associated with those of terrorists, the TSA official said.
All American citizens who enter the United States are automatically considered for inclusion in the program as officials check their names against watch lists and examine their patterns of travel, according to agency documents.
The TSA official would not divulge more details but said individuals are not targeted based on race or nationality.
TSA officials did not say whether any terrorist plots have been thwarted because of this program.