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[ISN] Ship security system draws FBI's attention

Subject: [ISN] Ship security system draws FBI's attention
Date: Fri, 12 May 2006 03:11:43 -0500 (CDT)
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/business/3858026.html

By BILL HENSEL JR.
Copyright 2006 Houston Chronicle 
May 11, 2006

A ship security concept being marketed out of Houston would be a
welcome tool for authorities if terrorists tried to hit the Port of
Houston, the FBI said Thursday.

While the agency doesn't endorse commercial products, Special Agent
Jim Walsh said, a remote-control security system like that developed
by VIP Systems could be useful.

"I do think this is a unique system," Walsh said of the
satellite-driven vessel security program being offered by VIP Systems
and its partners.

The system, unveiled in 2004, was reviewed Thursday at a maritime
security gathering at the Port of Houston Authority headquarters.

Among the features of the VIP system is one that would allow
authorities to see, via satellite, inside a vessel like an oil tanker
at sea and remotely shut down its engines if it were commandeered.

The FBI, which would respond jointly with the Coast Guard, would
rather deal with such a vessel out at sea than in port, Walsh said.

One major fear of port officials throughout the world is that an oil
tanker could be commandeered and used as a weapon of mass destruction,
said Alex Genin, chief executive and president of VIP Systems.

SkyPort International, a secure broadband satellite communications
provider that is working with VIP on the system, has a contract with
one company that had a vessel commandeered by pirates on the open seas
in Asia.

VIP is talking with several foreign governments about using its
security system, Genin said, but vessel owners or insurance companies
likely would have to be the ones to fund implementation.

The system also features biometrics to identify ship crew members.

SkyPort also is working with a Florida company that has developed a
system to scan vessels and containers before they enter or leave
ports. That company, SeaAway, wants to test its system at the Port of
Houston, according to Bernadette Kroecker, chief executive and
managing director.



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