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UK: Move over Rover as drugs checks go hi-tech

Ian Johnston

Scotland on Sunday

Sunday 25 Jan 2004

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THEY have been at the forefront of the war against drugs for years,
scurrying around the country's airports on the trail of illegal drugs.

But the Labradors and springer spaniels of the sniffer dog squads at
Scotland's airports and ports have found themselves out of a job after
becoming the latest victims of new technology.

New scanning devices which are as sensitive as the best sniffer dogs in the
business are to be introduced after initial trials proved hugely successful.

They cost about UKP30,000 compared to up to UKP17,000 to train a dog and
its handler, but do not need to be fed, taken for walks or played with, and
can work round the clock.

Queues of passengers will no longer be scrutinised by Rover and Spot, who
instead will be relegated to 'backroom' jobs like searching large
containers or the holds of ships.

Only last week the scanners, which can detect particles of drugs as small
as a billionth of a gram, were credited with helping Customs officers seize
cocaine with an estimated street value of UKP500,000 at Edinburgh Airport.

Dave Clark, the head of detection for Customs and Excise in Scotland, said:
"We call it our electronic dog. Real dogs only work for a few hours a day,
but with this thing you just switch it on and it works 24/7.

"You can have six officers working and taking swabs to the machine, which
will tell you whether the person has come into contact with drugs.

"We're just investing in a whole lot more of these machines throughout
Scotland now that we have seen their effectiveness.

"A dog might only work for three hours out of a shift. They have to rest,
be fed, taken for a walk and that sort of thing. From my perspective the
machines are great, they are giving us much better coverage."

Customs officers use the Ionscan or Ion Track devices by taking a swab
sample from baggage and putting this under the 'nose' if the machine, which
breaks down the substance into its basic components.

The particles are then held within the scanner on an electronic gate. When
this is opened, they travel down a tube on to a collector. Different
particles take different amounts of time to reach the collector, and this
can be measured.

In just eight seconds, the operator will be told whether there is any trace
of drugs and, if so, what type. They can also be used to detect explosives,
although this is dealt with by airport security, the police and army.

Clark said the sensitivity of the machines was such that they were used as
an "indicative tool".

"If you get a reasonably high reading, you go into it much more," he said.

Customs officers would use their discretion if very small amounts were
found. Someone who had used drugs while abroad but was not carrying them
would be advised to admit this as it would be a plausible explanation for a
very low reading.

Lying could lead to a luggage and full body cavity search as Customs
officers attempt to find the source of the drugs.

"Our drug seizures are definitely up; cannabis seizures and class A
seizures," Clark said.

The latest success came last Wednesday when eight kilos of cocaine were
discovered, partly because of the scanners.

A 30-year-old British man appeared at Edinburgh Sheriff Court the following
day charged with illegally importing the drugs on a flight from Prague via
Copenhagen and was remanded in custody.

However, dogs do have some advantages over machines: their agility and
enthusiasm in tracking down a scent. Customs plan to continue using dogs to
search larger areas.

Clark said: "There's still a place for sniffer dogs. You'd put them into a
container, but in dealing with passengers in a controlled area we would use
the machine."

Richard Bayliss, of international firm Smiths Detection, which makes the
Ionscan machine, had no qualms about doing man's best friend out of a job.

"I'm sure they have better jobs to go to. The handlers can look after them
and they will make people happy when they become nice little pets," he said.

"The machines we are talking about have detection capability down to
nano-grams, billionths-of-a-gram sensitivity.

"A dog will just tell you if it's found drugs. The machine doesn't just
tell you that, it tells you the precise type: cocaine or heroin or
amphetamine."

"And the machine can work 24 hours a day. It doesn't need sick leave,
holidays and doesn't get pregnant."

He said the amount of particles found was an indication of how much contact
there had been with a drug.

"If someone had been handling it or using it, you are going to get such a
big hit there will be no shadow of doubt they had been using it," Bayliss said.

"If I had been using cocaine and I shook hands with you, it could transfer
onto your hands. If you were checked the machine could find particles of
cocaine on you, but the Customs officers could then check your bags and
clear you.

"Each time we work with Customs, they take care. If we find you've got
cocaine or heroin [particles] on you, they want to search you in some depth."

However, animal trainers defended the role of the sniffer dog and said a
machine would never be able to take over completely.

Major Peter Downing, of the Defence Animal Centre in Melton Mowbray, which
trains dogs for the military, Customs and other agencies, said: "It
wouldn't happen within the military. We call them specialist search dogs
and the types of dogs we use would never ever be replaced by a machine.
That's just not a practical proposition."

However, he admitted: "In a more static environment such as an airport, it
might be."

PROS AND CONS

IN THE battle between dog and machine, each has their own strengths and
weaknesses.

Two canine teams could search an area the size of Hibs football stadium in
about an hour and a half, but 30 people with scanners might take a whole
day to cover the same area.

A dog's vital edge is that its nose is directed by a brain trained to catch
the slightest whiff of a scent and follow it to the source.

Scanners come into their own in situations where a large number of people
need to be individually checked.

Nearly eight people a minute can be processed by the ion machine, which
will almost instantly tell customs officers what drugs they are dealing
with and how much of a trace has been found.

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