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Why do they swab electronics at the airport?

Trace detection with swabbing This process, known officially as explosive trace detection, is doing just that—checking to see if your luggage has come into contact with a bomb or explosive material.



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One of the most common reasons you will get a pat down is if you refuse to go through the walk-through metal detector or the full body scanner. For some people going through a metal detector is not an option, while others just may prefer to not go through these.

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A Secondary Security Screening Selection or SSSS designation on your boarding pass means that you've been picked for a secondary security screening. The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) may select passengers for SSSS on flights from, to and within the U.S.

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Why is TSA swabbing your hands and bags at airport security? TSA will swab the hands of passengers as well as their luggage in order to detect traces of dangerous explosives.

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The TSA largely looks for physical evidence that a passenger could be a threat, so they'll generally have no reason to search through the data on your phone. After all, they're the Transportation Security Agency, not a detective agency. Even if they did have reason to want to access your phone, they'd need a warrant.

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TSA said the screening “is solely intended to verify that there has been no physical tampering or hidden threat placed within the electronic device.”

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The “why you” is pretty simple – it's usually at random. Unless you're on the super-secret list that increases your chances of getting SSSS on your boarding pass, the TSA's machines are said to pick people at random for swabbing. As for the why, they're usually checking for traces of explosives.

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Explosive Trace Detection (Swabbing) Screening officers may swab your carry-on baggage, clothing, shoes or laptop. When a trace of person is required, the screening officer will swab your hands, waist area and foot (or footwear) and then use ETD technology to test for explosives.

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They use electromagnetic waves, which are said to be harmless. From a privacy point of view though, they're even better. A monitor shows a generic cookie-cutter-like outline of a person and highlights any potential threats. The image is the same, regardless of gender, height, or body type.

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Removing laptops allows security staff to ensure that passengers are following airport rules and no dangerous items will be smuggled onto the plane. Michael continued: If I notice a laptop in a bag I'll either ask the owner to remove it or take the bag around again and turn it over to see from the other side.

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TSA officers swab your hands with a cotton cloth to collect explosives residue for testing in an Ion-Mobility Spectrometer (IMS), the machine they put the cloth in that determines if you go to your gate or to a private security screening for a pat down and metal detector.

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Remove personal electronic devices larger than a cell phone from your carry-on bag and place them into a bin with nothing placed on or under them for X-ray screening. (E.g. laptops, tablets, e-readers and handheld game consoles.) Remember to check the bins and collect all belongings after going through screening.

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As a bag scanned goes through the scanner, it absorbs radiation energy from the X-ray. The density of contraband such as drugs is very well known, and is easy to spot by airport security. Once a detector identifies an object with a suspicious density, the bag will be flagged for the additional inspection.

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It all depends on the country and the airport. Some metal detectors and scanners are set to give a false positive signal at random intervals, leading to a personal search, but in many instances what are declared to be random searches are not that at all.

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Any airline passenger with the letters “SSSS” printed on their boarding pass have been selected for extra security screening by airport security. Used by the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), the letters SSSS stand for Secondary Security Screening Selection or Secondary Security Screening Selectee.

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Secondary Security Screening Selection — or The Quad S, as some call it — means you have been selected for additional enhanced security screening by the Transportation Security Administration and the Department of Homeland Security.

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Farbstein said the short answer is no, you can't refuse a pat-down. If the millimeter wave scanner is set off, TSA is required to investigate. “If somebody triggers an alarm at the checkpoint, the way to resolve the alarm is to do a pat-down,” Farbstein said. “This has been the procedure for years.”

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Airport body scanners alert the TSO to threats—mainly weapons such as knives, guns and explosives. They are designed to detect “metallic and nonmetallic threat items,” according to the TSA.

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So legally, yes, you can refuse to be subjected to a TSA pat down. However if you refuse, you won't be allowed to go through the security checkpoint. That means you won't be allowed to enter the secured area of the airport. And with that, you won't be able to board your flight.

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Can you see a tampon during an airport body scan? This is a frequently asked question on Google, and if it's something you're worried about, you can breathe a sigh of relief. Airport body scanners can't see inside the body and therefore can't detect a tampon on a TSA female body scan image.

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