Tech to detect explosive devices to be tested at New York's Penn Station, authorities say

The TSA demonstrated the system designed to find people wearing explosives.

The equipment, known as stand-off explosive detection, passively scans passengers entering the station and can detect whether people may have explosives strapped to their bodies.

"It can’t prevent anybody from doing something, however what it can do is alert the operator of the equipment somebody may be entering the station to do harm," TSA spokeswoman Lisa Farbstein said.

"At long last and at not a moment too soon, the TSA has agreed to bring this new, potentially life-saving technology to New York City and Penn Station for testing, and so we thank the TSA for heeding the call," Schumer said. "When I made the push to bring this technology to New York City it was because we need to put it on the fast-track and we need to perfect it, because if it works, this is where we want it: in New York City’s busiest transit hubs."

On December 11, Akayed Ullah, a Bangladeshi immigrant, allegedly attached a crude pipe bomb to his chest with Velcro straps and zip ties and detonated it in a subway passageway near the Port Authority Bus Terminal. The blast injured Ullah, but no one else.

Had the stand-off explosive detection technology been in place, Farbstein said it may have detected Ullah’s device.

"We already know this equipment will detect what we saw in New York back in December at Port Authority because we rebuilt that device and tested it on this and indeed it would have alarmed," Farbstein said.

The system identifies objects that block the body’s naturally-occurring emissions. There is no radiation emitted by the unit. No anatomical details of a person are revealed. Instead side-by-side screens display images of a person alongside a color-indicator overlay: green if the person is harmless, red if there’s something potentially harmful beneath the person’s clothing. Police could then move in.

"Nobody has to stop and remove something from their backpack or their pockets,” she said. "They just walk by it."

Tests are continuing through the year. If successful the technology could be available for use in mass transit systems by the end of 2018.