Armed with a report showing some 25,000 security breaches at the nation's airports since 9/11, a congressional committee went after the beleaguered transportation security administration. Even bomb-sniffing dogs were brought in to make a point that they're just as, if not more, efficient than TSA's body imaging equipment.
"You take 1,000 people and put them into a room, I'll give you t10 whole body-imaging machines," Representative Jason Chaffetz, R-Utah. "You give me 5,000 people in another room. You give me one of his dogs and we will find that bomb before you find your bomb.
TSA assistant administrator John Sammon defended the agency, though, saying the number of breaches is misleading and represents only a fraction of the 5.5 billion people screened since 9/11. "TSA's goal is to work with airport authorities to stay ahead of evolving terrorist threats while protecting passengers' privacy," Sammon said.
Still, airport directors like Charlotte's Jerry Orr called the TSA "arrogant and bureaucratic." It was at Charlotte's airport in 2010 that a teenager slipped through security, stowed away and died in the wheel well of a passenger jet bound for Boston.
"Congress should continue to support, its support of allowing airports to opt out of using TSA," Orr said.
Included in the breaches cited in the report are some 6,000 travelers who made it past government screeners without proper scrutiny.
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