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Ferries a top terror target,
FBI cautions
Local office links ranking to
reporting of incidents
Friday, April 21, 2006
By PAUL SHUKOVSKY AND MIKE BARBER
P-I REPORTERS
Puget Sound's busy ferries are the No. 1 target for
maritime terrorism in this country, sharing that nerve-jangling status with Gulf
Coast fuel tankers, according to a national assessment of efforts to protect
U.S. seaports.
The findings, contained in a recent Justice Department
inspector general's report, mark the first time the FBI has publicly placed such
a high-risk label on Washington State Ferries.
The ranking was based largely on an analysis of
significant suspicious incidents at maritime facilities around the country.
"Our conclusion was that there was an extremely
high likelihood, in a handful of incidents, that there was pre-operation
planning" for a terrorist attack on the ferry system, said supervisory
intelligence analyst Ted Turner of Seattle's FBI office.
But Turner and other local FBI officials, along with
the Coast Guard, suggested Thursday that the top ranking may be because of more
aggressive reporting in this region.
Turner credited his agency's "very robust"
efforts to monitor all suspicious incidents and the Washington State Ferries
program to enlist help from crews and passengers as being likely factors in
driving up the number of reported incidents.
"You cannot conclude from the fact that we have a
lot of intelligence reporting that we are a No. 1 target," said Laura
Laughlin, the FBI's special agent in charge in Seattle. "Obviously, the
potential for a terrorist incident is here. But that's reading a lot into it to
say that."
The inspector general's report, released last month,
praised the Seattle FBI office's innovative intelligence assessments of
potential threats to the ferry system, the first of which was released in May
2004.
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Paul Joseph Brown /
P-I |
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After
the Seattle FBI office released an assessment of potential threats in
2004, steps were taken to improve security on ferries, including Coast
Guard escorts. |
After that assessment, several steps were taken to
improve ferry security, including the introduction of bomb-sniffing dogs,
elimination of unaccompanied freight and additional surveillance equipment.
State Patrol troopers also began riding the ferries, accompanied in the water by
heavily armed Coast Guard SWAT team boats.
Between April 2004 and September 2005, the FBI compiled
reports on 247 suspicious incidents involving the ferry system, a major increase
from the 157 documented between the 9/11 attacks and April 2004.
But Turner said there have been fewer incidents
considered high-risk in the most recent reporting period.
"We've never been able to tie a specific incident
to a terrorist group," he said. "We've never been able to tie a
specific incident to a terrorist plan."
The Washington ferry system is the biggest in the
United States. Some ferries can hold up to 2,500 passengers and 212 vehicles.
The national report hasn't resulted in an increase in
the maritime security alert level, said Coast Guard Capt. Stephen Metruck, who
as captain-of-the-port holds sway over maritime operations, controlling and
setting maritime security levels in Puget Sound.
But Metruck said a wide range of security enhancements
have gone into effect in the last couple of years and the measures are being
continuously re-evaluated.
For its seaport-protection report, the inspector
general asked the FBI's Threat Monitoring Unit to identify all maritime-related
suspicious incidents reported from September 2004 to September 2005 to its
computerized Guardian Threat Tracking System.
Of 51,000 suspicious incidents reported around the
nation, "the FBI identified (the) 68 (most significant) maritime-related
incidents, with the greatest concentration found in the Seattle area," the
report states.
The report also noted "a substantial number of
threats along the Gulf Coast, which most likely involved suspected surveillance
of energy facilities and oil tankers."
Of the 68 incidents, 46 are considered to be acts of
surveillance by terrorists.
Nearly half the suspected maritime targets nationally
were terminals and ferries, and both were "frequently filmed or
photographed in the Seattle area by people acting suspiciously," the report
said.
Neither the local FBI office nor the Coast Guard would
discuss specific incidents.
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Karen Ducey / P-I |
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Passengers
depart Thursday from the ferry at Bainbridge Island from Seattle. The
Washington ferry system is the nation's biggest. |
However, a September 2004 incident briefing report was
obtained by cryptome.org, a Web site that often posts classified documents. The
report states:
"WASHINGTON: Suspicious Activity of Two Middle
Eastern Males on Ferry. According to USCG reporting, on 27 September, in
Seattle, two Middle Eastern males were observed studying the schematic of the
Wenatchee Ferry for an extended period of time. As soon as the two males noticed
an employee approaching, they immediately walked away from the schematic and
picked up a magazine to ward off attention. At the end of the voyage, the two
males returned to their vehicle. A license plate check revealed the vehicle
belonged to a rental company. Information from the rental company on the vehicle
indicated that it was rented to a business located in Tukwila. The business was
unable to be located. An investigation is ongoing."
Turner would not comment on the investigation, except
to say "the key here is we've got something to follow up on -- a license
plate." Laughlin urged ferry riders to be vigilant and report any
suspicious activity.
"We are tracking down every suspicious incident
that is brought to our attention," she said. "It will be followed
up."
At Seattle's Colman Dock, ferry passengers waiting for
the 2:05 p.m. boat to Bainbridge on Thursday took the inspector general's report
in stride.
"If it's the highest threat here, why don't we
have more security here like we do at the airports?" asked Anya Averill,
52, of Portland, who was visiting friends. "I will notice things when I'm
flying. I'll go to the desk and say, 'There's a suitcase over there with no
person.' "
But Craig Swanson, 53, of Bainbridge said, "I
would worry more about being hit by a car on the freeway than being hit by a
terrorist."
Jenn Spies, 16, of Bainbridge, agreed. "If it was
a big concern of mine," she said, "I wouldn't be riding on the
ferry."
P-I reporter Paul Shukovsky can be reached at
206-448-8072 or paulshukovsky@seattlepi.com.
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