Federal letters tell students they are security threats!
WASHINGTON - May 13, 2008 - A
German graduate student in oceanography at M.I.T. applied to the Transportation
Security Administration for a new identification card allowing him to work
around ships and docks.
What the student, Wilken-Jon von
Appen, received in return was a letter that not only turned him down but added
an ominous warning from John M. Busch, a TSA official, “I have determined that
you pose a security threat.”
Similar letters have gone to 5,000
applicants across the country who have at least initially been turned down for
a Transportation Worker Identification Credential, an ID card meant to guard
against acts of terrorism, agency officials said Monday.
The officials also said they were
sorry about the language, which they may change in the future, but had no
intention of withdrawing letters already sent.
“It’s an unfortunate choice of
words in a bureaucratic letter,” said Ellen Howe, a security agency
spokeswoman.
Ms. Howe and Maurine Fanguy, who
oversees the new ID card program, said that most foreign students did not
qualify for the identity cards, but that the letters were not intended to label
the recipients as potential terrorists. Some applicants are also turned down
because of criminal records.
Mr. von Appen, 23, one of at least
four oceanography students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who
received identical letters, said he was stunned by its language.
“I was pretty much speechless and
quite intimidated,” said Mr. von Appen, whose research is supported by a
$65,000-a-year grant from the National Science Foundation.
A British student at M.I.T. who was
rejected, Sophie Clayton, 28, said that at first she was amused at what
appeared to be a bureaucratic absurdity. But as she pondered the designation,
Ms. Clayton said she grew worried. “The two words ‘security threat’ are now in
the files next to my name, my photograph and my fingerprints,” she said.
Institute officials were also
disturbed. The agency controls airport security, and “our students travel in
and out of the country a lot,” said Danielle Guichard-Ashbrook, associate dean
and director of the international student office at M.I.T.
And the agency is part of the
Department of Homeland Security, which oversees immigration matters, including
student visas.
Ms. Guichard-Ashbrook said the
security agency should remove the misleading language from all files and issue
new letters formally withdrawing the “threat” label.
But Ms. Howe, the agency spokeswoman, said that the
letters were legal, if flawed, and that there were no plans to send
replacements.