Fentanyl scanners that were sitting idle for lack of federal funds can now be installed at the border to catch smugglers
Source: NBC News
May 9, 2024, 9:56 AM EDT
Fifty-six scanning systems that can detect fentanyl in personal vehicles at southern U.S. border crossings will now be installed because of $200 million in new funding that was approved by Congress after NBC News reported the scanners were sitting unused in warehouses.
Ninety-five percent of the fentanyl U.S. law enforcement seizes is discovered in personal vehicles driven across the border by U.S. citizens, according to Department of Homeland Security officials, and the scanners are the strongest tool the Biden administration has to detect fentanyl in vehicles.
After the NBC News report, two senators, three House members and two state attorneys general called for additional funding to install the scanners that had been previously requested by DHS. Funding to finally install the machines came through the House Homeland Security appropriations bill, which Congress passed in late March.
The 56 that will be installed because of the new funding will be in place by 2026, according to a senior Customs and Border Protection official. Thirty-one scanning systems are already in place, and 27 are under construction. All of the scanners were appropriated in 2021. DHS says that once the scanners are in place, 40% of all personal vehicles crossing the border will be scanned. Now, fewer than 5% of personal vehicles are X-rayed, according to DHS officials.
Read more: https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/national-security/border-fentanyl-scanners-sat-idle-lack-funding-rcna151374
Civics 101 - one may have been authorized funds to buy a thing but if that doesn't include "installation", then additional funds need to be appropriated to cover that.
Hotler
(11,558 posts)Or, if they fixed the problem they wouldn't have anything to bitch about.
Hermit-The-Prog
(33,911 posts)Republicans have become more and more extreme since the Newt.
IronLionZion
(45,837 posts)But immigrants on foot are the real problem
Clint Eastwood's movie The Mule is about a real life story of an elderly fellow smuggling drugs for a cartel.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leo_Sharp
FredGarvin
(498 posts)How much do they cost on a per unit basis.?
Who makes the scanners?
If there is a machine that can scan and detect fentanyl, one would think that these would be deployed everywhere as the drug is wreaking on the entire NA continent.
BumRushDaShow
(131,197 posts)A Non-Invasive Inspection system at the U.S. Border near Nogales. Photo from U.S. Customs and Border Control
A mobile Non-Invasive Inspection system used by the U.S. Customs and Border Control. Photo from U.S. Customs and Border Control
A Non-Invasive Inspection system at the U.S. Border near Nogales. Photo from U.S. Customs and Border Control
I expect the installation costs also include testing and calibration along with a maintenance contract.
FredGarvin
(498 posts)How much do they cost on a per unit basis.?
Who makes the scanners?
If there is a machine that can scan and detect fentanyl, one would think that these would be deployed everywhere as the drug is wreaking on the entire NA continent.
People on both sides are making a lot of money
Warpy
(111,668 posts)and make them concentrate on the real problem.
I have less than no use for that agency at present. That shit is coming in through containers, on yachts, through tunnels, and by plane.
BumRushDaShow
(131,197 posts)This isn't for DEA (which is under DOJ), but CBP (which is under DHS).