Napolitano: Security plan in place for Super Bowl

Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano answers a reporter's question during an NFL Super Bowl football security news conference. (Feb. 1, 2010) Credit: AP
After touring a rain-soaked Sun Life Stadium, U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said Monday that preparations are in place to thwart any terrorist threat or safety problem at the Super Bowl.
“We are doing everything we can think of in preparation to make sure it is a great event,” Napolitano told reporters. “I’m here today to see the operation myself. I thought it was important to get down here.”
Milt Ahlerich, the NFL’s vice president for security, said Napolitano’s tour of the stadium in nearby Miami Gardens was the first time a Homeland Security secretary had visited a Super Bowl site before game day.
About 1,000 federal, state and local law enforcement and security personnel are working Sunday’s game and events leading up to it, said James Loftus, director of the Miami-Dade Police Department.
Even though the FBI reports no credible threat against the Super
Bowl, al-Qaida and other terror groups have frequently expressed
interest in attacking a major U.S. sporting event.
“Rest assured, we’re going to look out for you,” Loftus said
of what fans attending the game can expect. “We do this stuff week
in and week out, and we’re good at it.”
The nerve center for security is the FBI-run Joint Operations
Center, which includes representatives from 64 agencies at all
levels of government, said John Gillies, agent in charge of the
FBI’s Miami field office. He said preparations have included
intensive training and tabletop exercises involving various threat
scenarios.
“There’s security that the public will see, and there’s security the public will not see,” Gillies said.
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives will have its battalion of bomb-detecting dogs on hand, many of them veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, said Hugo Barrera, chief
of ATF’s Miami office. He said the dogs are able to find over 19,000 separate explosives components.
“They can detect about anything,” Barrera said.
Fans themselves can also play a role by reporting any suspicious
activity or unattended bags, Ahlerich said. And Napolitano said
there will be a number flashed on screens at the stadium where fans can send a text message if they see anything amiss.
Other preparations include temporary flight restrictions and a 100-yard security perimeter around the stadium on game day. Fans
attending the game face a long list of prohibited items, including
long-lens cameras, camcorders, backpacks, noisemakers, coolers and camera tripods.
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