PogoWasRight.org

Menu
  • About
  • Privacy
Menu

Court orders TSA to come up with schedule for expeditiously issuing “final rule” for use of strip-search machines

Posted on October 25, 2015June 26, 2025 by Dissent

On October 23, Papers, Please! wrote:

Acting on a petition submitted in July 2015 by the Competitive Enterprise Institute, the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit today ordered the Department of Homeland Security to, within 30 days from today, “submit to the court a schedule for the expeditious issuance of a final rule ”governing the TSA’s use of virtual strip search machines or body scanners (what the TSA calls “Advanced Imaging Technology”) “within a reasonable time”.

The court didn’t say what it would consider “expeditious” or a “reasonable” time for the TSA to finalize rules for its use of body scanners.

I think we’re waaaay past “expeditious” by now and are more on the order of “sometime before the next millenium, folks?” Note that this is not ordering the actual rule be produced within 30 days – just a schedule for issuing a rule that should have been issued years ago.

Read more on Papers, Please!

For its part, EPIC  wrote:

The Court of Appeal for the D.C. Circuit today ordered TSA to comply with the ruling in EPIC v. DHS and conduct an “expeditious” rulemaking on the use of body scanners at airports. EPIC successfully sued TSA in 2011 to compel notice-and-comment rulemaking after the agency failed to solicit public comments as required by law. EPIC said the body scanner program was “unlawful, invasive, and ineffective.” The backscatter x-ray devices were subsequently removed from U.S. airports, though the millimeter devices remain. In 2015 the Competitive Enterprise Institute filed a petition to compel TSA to issue a final rule as required by the EPIC v. DHS mandate. TSA now has 30 days to submit a rulemaking plan to the court.

 

No related posts.

Category: Featured NewsSurveillanceU.S.

Post navigation

← Court Dismisses Wikimedia’s Lawsuit Over NSA Surveillance
After FOI Request, EPIC Obtains Secret “Umbrella Agreement” from the EU Commission →

Now more than ever

Search

Contact Me

Email: info@pogowasright.org

Mastodon: Infosec.Exchange/@PogoWasRight

Signal: +1 516-776-7756

Categories

Recent Posts

  • Germany’s top court holds that police can only use spyware to investigate serious crimes
  • Flightradar24 receives reprimand for violating aircraft data privacy rights
  • Nebraska Attorney General Sues GM and OnStar Over Alleged Privacy Violations
  • Federal Court Allows Privacy Related Claims to Proceed in a Proposed Class Action Lawsuit Against Motorola
  • Italian Garante Adopts Statement on Health Data and AI
  • Trump administration is launching a new private health tracking system with Big Tech’s help
  • Attorney General James Takes Action to Protect Sensitive Personal Information of Tens of Millions of People

RSS Recent Posts on DataBreaches.net

  • Connex Credit Union notifies 172,000 members of hacking incident
  • Federal judiciary says it is boosting security after cyberattack; researcher finds new leaks (CORRECTED)
  • Bank of America Refused To Reimburse Georgia Customer After Hackers Hit Account. Then a News Station Showed Up.
  • NCERT Issues Advisory on “Blue Locker” Ransomware Targeting Pakistan’s Key Institutions
  • Scattered Spider has a new Telegram channel to list its attacks
©2025 PogoWasRight.org. All rights reserved.
Menu
  • About
  • Privacy