Tuesday, March
26, 2002
FAA agent
reveals security lapses
Ex-Cincinnatian
cries 'coverup'
By James Pilcher jpilcher@enquirer.com
The Cincinnati
Enquirer
 Dzakovic
|
If Bogdan Dzakovic wanted, he could be
one of the most dangerous men in the world. Given the right
materials, this mild-mannered, bespectacled Cincinnati native
and LaSalle High School graduate could probably take down just
about any airliner, anywhere, any time.
“I was paid by Uncle Sam to be
a terrorist, and I don't do anything half (way),” said Mr.
Dzakovic, leader of the Federal Aviation Administration's Red
Team, the undercover squad that tests security at airports
throughout the United States and around the world.
Late last month, Mr. Dzakovic,
known as John while growing up in Over-the-Rhine and Mount
Airy, filed a federal whistleblower complaint and went public
with what he says is the FAA's “blatant cover-up” of aviation
security lapses that were apparent well before the Sept. 11
terrorist attacks.
The issue gained renewed
importance Monday, with USA Today reporting that
security inspectors had continued to find holes at airport
screening stations since Sept. 11. The paper obtained an
internal memo that stated that during inspections of 32 U.S.
airports, inspectors were able to sneak knives through
security 70 percent of the time, guns made it through 30
percent of the time and screeners caught only 40 percent of
fake bombs.
Officials at the
Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport said they
had not seen the report. Airport spokesman Ted Bushelman said
that “we think we would have been told if we had been tested,
and we haven't.”
The results outlined in the new
memo are in line with what Mr. Dzakovic claims was the case
prior to Sept. 11.
“I joined the FAA to fight
terrorism, but little did I know that I would be fighting the
FAA and not terrorism,” said Mr. Dzakovic, 47, who is now
based in Washington.
“I realized early on, like in
1995, that the system wasn't working and I tried to work
behind the scenes, and I went to the Department of
Transportation's inspector general,” he said. “And he told me
that unless I brought him a smoking gun or a dead body, I
couldn't get anywhere.”
The complaint does not lay out
potential remedies for the problems Mr. Dzakovic sees. In the
complaint, he says the agency continually ignored his
findings, and that he was occasionally instructed to tone down
his tests, which included trying to sneak fake bombs and guns
through security checkpoints and onto planes in checked
baggage.
He also says that supervisors
told him not to file reports on certain incidents, for fear of
making airlines or individual airports look bad.
Mr. Dzakovic has since been
reassigned to the Transportation Security Administration, the
new agency created to oversee airline and airport security,
although he says he has not conducted any tests personally
since Sept. 11.
Whistleblower protection
prevents his employers from firing or otherwise disciplining
him for speaking out.
TSA spokesman Paul Turk would
not comment on Mr. Dzakovic's specific claims.
“The Red Team's pointed out
what problems they saw, but until recently, they were not
asked to address solutions as well,” Mr. Turk said. “So they
have no way of knowing what corrections have been taken.”
Mr. Dzakovic said he decided to
go public soon after Sept. 11, a process that took several
months. “I couldn't live with myself unless I took this step,”
he said.
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