Mass. Man Detained After
Cologne Sets Off Airport Explosive Detector
BOSTON (CBS) - A Massachusetts man says the end to his
vacation was anything but pleasant when TSA agents targeted him because of his
cologne.
Jean Marie Occean, his wife,
and young daughter were in the Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood Airport ready to fly
back to Boston. Occean said the TSA pulled him into a separate room for
additional screening when he tested positive for explosive chemicals.
He said agents eventually
told him it was likely something very common that set off the sensors.
"It
could be cologne. I had never heard that," said Occean.
His cologne that was bought
at a local department store could have set off the TSA's bomb detection
system.
"My wife wore cologne from
France, and she didn't get tested," said Occean.
In a statement the TSA
said in part:
"TSA's Explosives Trace Detection (ETD) technology must be
sensitive enough to detect even the slightest presence of explosives on a
passenger or piece of luggage. Due to this sensitivity, on occasion, commonly
used items can render a false positive alarm during screening. All ETD alarms
generated from a passenger's hands are resolved by conducting additional
screening of the passenger and their accessible property.
ETD technology as part of its
layered approach to security to protect the nation's transportation networks.
TSA has used ETD technology at security checkpoints around the country to screen
carry-on and checked baggage as well as passengers for explosives. Since ETD is
used on a random basis, passengers should not expect to see the same thing at
every airport or each time they travel."
Occean grew-up in Haiti and
became a U.S. citizen last month. He rarely flies and doesn't know when or if
he'll do it again.
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