U.S. Customs and Border Police Anti-Terrorism Teams Inspect Imported Cargo

WILMINGTON, CA - JUNE 2: At a US Customs and Border Patrol warehouse used by their Anti-Terrorism Contraband Enforcement Team, bags of imported Canadian lentils are reloaded by a worker in a container following inspection for suspicious materials June 2, 2004 in Wilmington, California. After passing through a large x-ray machine, inspectors determined the container might be carrying suspicious or possibly terrorist material. The container was moved to the Wilmington warehouse where the cargo was manually inspected and reloaded. Before 9/11, most inspections of container cargo were conducted for narcotics smuggling. With Department of Homeland Security now controlling more of the overall anti-terrorist campaign, inspections for weapons of mass destruction in ports have been stepped up. The Port of Los Angeles-Long Beach receives over 3 million containers annually. Inspectors are on the look out for dirty bombs, weapons smuggling or terrorist contraband. Surveillance of the waterways inside the port area has been stepped up. The LA-LB port facility is the west coast's energy hub for natural gas imports plus oil and gasoline refining. (Photo by Robert Nickelsberg/Getty Images)
WILMINGTON, CA - JUNE 2: At a US Customs and Border Patrol warehouse used by their Anti-Terrorism Contraband Enforcement Team, bags of imported Canadian lentils are reloaded by a worker in a container following inspection for suspicious materials June 2, 2004 in Wilmington, California. After passing through a large x-ray machine, inspectors determined the container might be carrying suspicious or possibly terrorist material. The container was moved to the Wilmington warehouse where the cargo was manually inspected and reloaded. Before 9/11, most inspections of container cargo were conducted for narcotics smuggling. With Department of Homeland Security now controlling more of the overall anti-terrorist campaign, inspections for weapons of mass destruction in ports have been stepped up. The Port of Los Angeles-Long Beach receives over 3 million containers annually. Inspectors are on the look out for dirty bombs, weapons smuggling or terrorist contraband. Surveillance of the waterways inside the port area has been stepped up. The LA-LB port facility is the west coast's energy hub for natural gas imports plus oil and gasoline refining. (Photo by Robert Nickelsberg/Getty Images)
U.S. Customs and Border Police Anti-Terrorism Teams Inspect Imported Cargo
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Credit:
Robert Nickelsberg / Contributor
Editorial #:
51115877
Collection:
Getty Images News
Date created:
02 June, 2004
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Source:
Getty Images North America
Object name:
51109847RN222_security