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Maryland National Guard Participates in a Annual Homeland Defense and Disaster Response Exercise

Maj. Gen. Scott Sherman fields questions at Vibrant Response 24's mock press conference in Colorado, testing U.S. military readiness for CBRN disasters. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Sgt. Kimberley Glazier). (Photo Credit: Sgt. Kimberley Glazier)

Over 45 Maryland National Guard soldiers provided public affairs and logistics support during Vibrant Response 24 at Fort Carson, Colorado, April 19 to May 3. VR is an annual U.S. Army North, U. S. Northern Command – directed Command Post exercise planned in coordination with the Department of Defense, Department of Homeland Security, Federal Emergency Management Agency and other federal and state partners.

The training provided the participating military units an opportunity to work together with federal and state agencies to validate their response to a chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear (CBRN) catastrophic event. U.S. Army North, in coordination with U.S. Northern Command and the Department of Homeland Security, have conducted these annual exercises since 2008.

“The Maryland National Guard proudly supports Army North’s VR exercise, enhancing the Department of Defense’s readiness for chemical , biological, radiological and nuclear event response,” said U.S. Army Col. Bradley Martsching, the commander of Maryland National Guard’s 58th Troop Command,. “Our logistical and public affairs support to the exercise underscores our capability to assist our active duty partners in national-level events, showcasing our commitment to seamless collaboration and effective crisis management. This collaboration reinforces the Maryland National Guard’s integral role in bolstering national security and readiness.”

Soldiers from the Maryland National Guard’s 29th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment provided public affairs support to Joint Task Force – Civil Support during the scenario based training. This includes interacting with media roleplayers, drafting press releases, and engaging on social media simulation platforms. Soldiers from 58th and 581st Troop Commands processed over 350 participants for phase one of the exercise and provided logistical support to the exercise as Mayor Cell at Fort Carson.

“As a fellow service member in the National Guard, I was really proud to know that an Army National Guard unit was coming here to manage our mayor cell and provide public affairs support,” said Maj. Gen. Scott Sherman, Commanding General, Task Force 51 and Deputy Commanding General – Support for the United States Army North. “The Joint Reception Staging Onward Movement and Integration process led by the Maryland National Guard and public affairs support has been outstanding. The public affairs scenario training certainly helped me and my TF-51 senior leaders with media training and realistic press conferences that asked the difficult questions.”

Vibrant Response is an annual U.S. Northern Command directed command post exercise. As U.S. Northern Command’s Joint Force Land Component Command, U.S. Army North is Vibrant Response 24’s executive agent responsible for ensuring the training focuses on a simulated Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear (CBRN) disaster scenario designed to validate U.S. Northern Command’s CBRN Response Enterprise’s ability to exercise short-notice and no-notice deployment of military forces at the request of civil authorities to save lives, alleviate human suffering, and mitigate property damage following a catastrophic CBRN event.

Read more at U.S. Army

U.S. Military Will Spend at Least $320 Million to Construct Gaza Aid Pier

Pier-building begins Construction of the floating JLOTS pier in the Mediterranean is underway. The pier will support USAID and humanitarian partners to receive and deliver humanitarian aid to the people of Gaza. U.S. Transportation Command and U.S. European Command support the movement of humanitarian aid. (U.S. Central Command Photo)

A U.S. Navy ship and several Army vessels involved in an American-led effort to bring more aid into the besieged Gaza Strip are offshore of the enclave and building out a floating platform for the operation that the Pentagon has said will cost at least $320 million.

Sabrina Singh, Pentagon spokeswoman, told reporters the cost is a rough estimate for the project and includes the transportation of the equipment and pier sections from the United States to the coast of Gaza, as well as the construction and aid delivery operations.

Satellite photos analyzed by The Associated Press on Tuesday show the USNS Roy P. Benavidez about 11 kilometers (6.8 miles) from the port on shore, where the base of operations for the project is being built by the Israeli military. The USAV General Frank S. Besson Jr., an Army logistics vessel, and several other Army boats are with the Benavidez and working on the construction of what the military calls the Joint Logistics Over-the-Shore, or JLOTS, system.

Read the rest of the story at AP.

Houthis Attack 2 U.S. Navy Destroyers & Israel-Linked Commercial Ships In The Indian Ocean

Generic US Navy Ship

Yemeni Houthis have claimed that they targeted the Portugal-flagged container ship MSC Orion through one of their drone attacks in the Indian Ocean as part of the ongoing movement against international shipping in solidarity with the Palestinians against the ongoing Israeli military actions in Gaza.

MSC Orion was moving between the Sines (Portugal) and Salalah (Oman) ports. Zodiac Maritime is its registered owner.

Zodiac is partly owned by Eyal Ofer, an Israeli businessman. The firm did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Read the rest of the story at marine insight, here.

LiDAR-Equipped Unmanned Aircraft System Supports NPS Research

U.S. Navy Lt. Corbin Mellow, a student at the Naval Postgraduate School (NPS), prepares for a data collection flight using an unmanned aircraft system (UAS) equipped with an infrared LiDAR, or Light Detection and Ranging, sensor. The three-dimensional, laser-scanning equipped UAS is supporting multiple student research efforts to develop a more effective and reliable capability to estimate bathymetry in the tumultuous, dynamic – and operationally critical – surf zone. (Photo by: Javier Chagoya)

An unmanned aircraft system (UAS) equipped with an infrared LiDAR, or Light Detection and Ranging, sensor is enabling students at the Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) to conduct important research into the depth of water in coastal areas.

The three-dimensional, laser-scanning equipped UAS is supporting multiple student research efforts under a project led by NPS Associate Professor of Oceanography Mara Orescanin to develop a more effective and reliable capability to estimate bathymetry in the tumultuous, dynamic – and operationally critical – surf zone.

“This area is typically a challenge to predict bathymetry because it is optically opaque, difficult to operate in as strong currents and waves develop, and changes on scales of hours to days from collecting data,” says Orescanin, who serves as principal investigator on the Office of Naval Research and National Science Foundation funded research.

Current efforts are building on the thesis research of a recent NPS graduate, U.S. Marine Corps Maj. Justin Crisp, who demonstrated how UAS-mounted near-Infrared LiDAR sensors outperformed conventional surveying and mapping methods to “provide a standalone solution to estimate nearshore bathymetry … and a promising path to improving coastal access capabilities for intelligence collection,” he wrote in his September 2023 NPS thesis.

U.S. Navy Lt. Corbin Mellow, an NPS Space Systems Operations student projected to graduate in June 2024, is also utilizing the LiDAR-equipped UAS for his thesis, with Orescanin and physics faculty member Dr. Christopher Smithtro as co-advisors. Mellow is exploring the scalability of LiDAR sensors, comparing the UAS-mounted unit with possible space-borne, remote-sensing capabilities to improve bathymetry using LiDAR.

Future plans for this project will explore the integration of new payloads on the LiDAR-equipped UAS focused on detecting and mapping mines in the surf zone, Orescanin says.

Read more at America’s Navy.

TSA Recognizes Top Performers and Airports of 2023

Some of the winners of the 2023 National TSA Honorary Awards ceremony held at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport on April 30

The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) recognized its top performing employees and teams during the 2023 TSA Honorary Awards Ceremony held at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport on April 30.

“It’s my greatest honor and privilege to highlight our incredible employees,” said TSA Administrator David Pekoske. “This year’s TSA Honorary Awards is another opportunity for me to personally show my appreciation of our award recipients from across TSA, who have made significant contributions in support of TSA’s mission.”

“We’re here today to honor the remarkable dedication of TSA personnel who go above and beyond in their service to ensure the safety and security of the American people,” said Department of Homeland Security Senior Official Performing the Duties of Deputy Secretary Kristie Canegallo. “It’s a privilege to highlight and celebrate their ongoing commitment to excellence.”

Gerardo Hernandez “In the Line of Duty” Award

Honoring the memory, service and sacrifice of TSA Officer Gerardo Hernandez, this award recognizes employees who distinguish themselves through bravery, valor and heroism in the line of duty. Hernandez was killed in the line of duty at Los Angeles International Airport on November 1, 2013.

The 2023 award recognizes Amanda Houck from Intelligence and Analysis. Amanda is a senior TSA Field Intelligence Officer with prior experience as a Coast Guard veteran. While returning from the Washington State Fusion Center’s Crime and Safety Conference, Amanda reacted with speed, laser-like focus and complete disregard for her own safety when she came upon a multi-car pile-up along a winding, mountainous road in the early afternoon hours of a snowy, cloud cast winter day in eastern Washington. Amanda moved from vehicle to vehicle to triage the victims and assess the severity of their injuries, remaining calm while using her well-honed first responder medical knowledge to provide first aid and offer steadying words of encouragement. Amanda’s actions, including her selfless attitude in placing the welfare and needs of others above her own, are a tribute to her composed demeanor, decisiveness and overall professionalism all while confronting a multitude of challenges in a sea of turmoil and distress.

Norman Y. Mineta “Cornerstone” Award

Each year, this award recognizes and honors the leadership legacy of former Department of Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta. Following the 9/11 attacks in 2001, Mineta was instrumental in establishing what TSA is today.

This year’s recipient is Amber Waldner-Ortiz of Intelligence and Analysis. During FY23, Amber was detailed as the Vetting Operations, Section Chief in the Vetting Analysis Division (VAD), National Transportation Vetting Center (NTVC) West in Colorado Springs, Colorado. She superbly led the NTVC vetting workforce in Colorado Springs to record production levels, which significantly impacted TSA and the U.S. national security mission. She also created robust training, mentoring, development and role-based opportunities while promoting strong employee engagement and superior morale. She does this through outstanding leadership, character and complete dedication to her workforce. She remained committed while facing a life-threatening situation with her only son who required surgery. She quickly trained someone to backfill her position so she could be at her son’s bedside during the critical procedure and recovery. During her career, Amber has faced and overcome tremendous personal adversity. As one of the first female Federal Air Marshals, a Section Chief in the Training and Workforce Development Branch, and her current position, she has consistently delivered top-notch results.

“Blogger Bob” Award

In memory of Curtis “Bob” Burns, who was dedicated to building TSA’s social media presence as “Blogger Bob,” this award recognizes an employee or team who positively influenced public engagement by identifying, crafting, promoting and implementing creative solutions that significantly impacted the traveling public’s views and interactions with the agency.

This year’s award winner is the Strategic Communications & Public Affairs Media Relations team. The team, which includes seven regional spokespeople and two press assistants, held 272 proactive media events, answered more than 1,250 local media queries, published 575 local press releases and posted just over 2,000 tweets from their regional “X” accounts. Their outstanding work reached more than 2 billion people and garnered the agency just over $200 million in earned media coverage. The team also proactively conducted media events at 107 airports and earned coverage for airports of all sizes, including Guam, Saipan and Puerto Rico.

Public Service Award

This award recognizes TSA employees who volunteer with nonprofit or community service programs or activities, contributing to meaningful results for individuals or the larger public good.

The 2023 Public Service Award recipient is Heather Proctor, a member of Domestic Aviation Operations at Austin-Bergstrom International Airport. Heather is an outstanding example of a distinguished public servant through her service as a volunteer for the American Cancer Society (ACS), American Legion, Bastrop Church, Austin Police Department and local schools. For ACS, she is a senior member of the organization’s “Relay for Life,” a cancer fundraiser that she has served for the past 10 years. Heather is an assistant instructor for community-based, basic handgun safety courses for the public, as she helps guide new gun owners through federal and state rules and regulations of gun safety and how to shoot a pistol for self-protection in a local gun range. Her energy is matched only by her enthusiasm and ability to lend herself to so many causes throughout the year. She is a credit to her local community and TSA.

Other 2023 TSA Honorary Award winners include:

Airport of the Year, CAT X-I: Team George Bush Intercontinental Airport
Airport of the Year, CAT II-IV: Team Wichita Dwight D. Eisenhower National Airport
Unsung Hero Award for outstanding “behind-the-scenes” performance: Robert Crawford of Law Enforcement/ Federal Air Marshal Service
Transportation Security Officer (TSO) of the Year: Gregory Deschenes from Bradley International Airport
Lead TSO of the Year: Scott A. Lambert from Chicago O’Hare International Airport
Supervisory TSO of the Year: Jennifer Toms from Albuquerque International Sunport
Transportation Security Manager of the Year: Charles Johnston II of Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport
Coordination Center Employee of the Year: Andre Giacalone from Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport
Federal Security Directors of the Year: William Csontos from Bradley International Airport and Gregory Hawko from Seattle–Tacoma International Airport
Deputy Federal Security Director of the Year:

Assistant Federal Security Director of the Year – Screening:

Jesus Serrano of Tampa International Airport

Donald Wilburn from Dallas Fort Worth International Airport and Rusty Edwards, Law Enforcement/Federal Air Marshal Service.

Canine Handler of the Year: Randall Bownds from George Bush Intercontinental Airport
Inspector of the Year: Anthony M. Nolasco from George Bush Intercontinental Airport
Transportation Security Specialist (Explosives) of the Year: Steven Martinez from Luis Muñoz Mar í in International Airport
Federal Air Marshal (FAM) of the Year: Roland Morneault from the Charlotte Douglas International Airport
Supervisory Air Marshal in Charge (SAC) of the Year: Stanley Lee from the Atlanta Field Office
Supervisory FAM or Assistant SAC of the Year: Esther Fausett from the Washington Field Office
Management, Administrative and Professional Employee of the Year: Beat Gsell of Los Angeles International Airport
Passenger Support Specialist of the Year: Julia Perry from Denver International Airport
Security Training Instructor of the Year: Amanda Burger from Spokane International Airport
National Deployment Force Officer of the Year: Carrie Lennon from Indianapolis International Airport
Intelligence or Vetting Analyst of the Year: William Wilkinson from the National Transportation Vetting Center – East
Transportation Security Administration Representative of the Year:

Federal Air Marshal Service Field Office of the Year:

Headquarters Office of the Year (Program office, Directorate or Division):

Haley Gallagher from TSA International Operations

Miami Field Office

Intelligence and Analysis

A complete list of winners and nominees is available here.

ERO San Francisco Removes Mexican Fugitive Wanted for Homicide

ERO San Francisco removes Mexican fugitive wanted for homicide (ICE Photo)

Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) San Francisco removed an unlawfully present foreign fugitive to his home country of Mexico April 24. He was wanted by Mexican law enforcement authorities for homicide and attempted homicide.

David Antonio Hernandez Ventura, 26, departed from McFarland and arrived at the San Ysidro Port of Entry, where he was handed over to authorities from Mexico.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s Border Patrol agents encountered Hernandez when he attempted to enter the United States without being admitted by an immigration officer under the alias Ruben Sanchez-Ignacio. He was removed under the Title 42 authority March 30, April 1 and April 8, 2021.

Hernandez reentered the United States on an unknown date without being admitted by an immigration officer and was discovered living in Fresno Dec. 2, 2023, when the Fresno Police Department arrested him on local charges.

Officers with ERO arrested Hernandez Jan. 24 near his last known residence and transferred him to the Golden State Annex in McFarland to await immigration and removal proceedings. An immigration judge ordered him removed Feb. 8, the Board of Immigration Appeals dismissed his appeal April 4, and officers carried out the judge’s removal order April 24.

ERO Removes Noncitizen Wanted for Aggravated Extortion in El Salvador

ERO Harlingen removes noncitizen wanted for aggravated extortion in El Salvador (ICE Photo)

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) Harlingen removed an undocumented noncitizen wanted by authorities in El Salvador for aggravated extortion. Deportation officers removed Cindy Patricia Quintanilla, 35, a citizen of El Salvador, from the United States to El Salvador April 24.

On Aug. 31, 2023, Quintanilla entered the United States at or near Rio Grande City without inspection, admission or parole by an immigration officer.

On Sept. 1, 2023, U.S. Border Patrol arrested Quintanilla and served her with a notice and order of expedited removal. On Sept. 4, she entered ICE custody. On Sept. 18, the ICE assistant attaché for removals in El Salvador confirmed Quintanilla is wanted there for aggravated extortion.

On April 24, 2024, she was removed to El Salvador and transferred to local authorities without incident.

U.S. Travel Industry Opposes FAA Amendment That Would Restrict TSA’s Use of Biometric Technology

(TSA Photo)

The U.S. Travel Association is pushing back against a controversial amendment in the Federal Aviation Administration reauthorization bill that would restrict the Transportation Security Administration’s (TSA) use of passenger screening technology.

Senator Jeff Merkley (D-OR) and Senator John Kennedy (R-LA) have drawn the ire of the industry for crafting an amendment that would pump the brakes on biometrics and facial matching technology aimed at speeding up screening at airport checkpoints across the nation and making travel safer.

If signed into law, the amendment would immediately prevent TSA from using most automated facial matching technology at security checkpoints and would ban or severely restrict TSA from using biometric technology such as the CAT-2 machines and TSA PreCheck’s Touchless ID partnerships with Delta Air Lines and United Airlines.

Read the rest of the story at Travel Pulse, here.

U.S. Border Patrol Agents and Jefferson County Sheriff’s Deputies Seized More Than $300,000 in Smuggled Tobacco Products

cigarette

U.S. Border Patrol agents assigned to the Wellesley Island Station Anti-Smuggling Unit assisted the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office on a traffic stop that resulted in the seizure of more than one million smuggled cigarettes.

On April 14, Border Patrol agents responded to a traffic stop initiated by sheriff’s deputies on State Route 411. Through investigative steps, Border Patrol agents and sheriff’s deputies discovered more than fifty cardboard boxes that contained 1,025,000 non-compliant-loose cigarettes. Further investigation by U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Office of Field Operations, revealed that the loose cigarettes were not manufactured in the United States and were determined to have a MSRP of more than $336,000.

“Discovering and removing illicit and unregulated tobacco products is one of the many enforcement actions we take to safeguard our nation and the community,” said Patrol Agent in Charge Andrew Regan. “The partnership the Border Patrol has with the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office is crucial in the prevention of criminal organizations from profiting and exploiting the trafficking of potentially hazardous tobacco products.”

The cigarettes and vehicle were seized for destruction/forfeiture by the U. S. Border Patrol. The trafficking of smuggled tobacco products in New York state remains illegal under state and federal law.

CBP Confiscates $761K Worth of Cocaine at Hidalgo Port of Entry

(CBP)

U.S. Customs and Border Protection, Office of Field Operations officers at Hidalgo/Pharr/Anzalduas Port of Entry this week seized more than $761,000 in cocaine in a single enforcement action.

“This significant cocaine seizure is reflective of the strong enforcement posture of our frontline CBP officers and their effectiveness in applying inspections experience and technology,” said Port Director Carlos Rodriguez, Hidalgo/Pharr/Anzalduas Port of Entry. “Seizures like these exemplify CBP’s commitment to advancing our border security mission while facilitating lawful trade and travel.”

The seizure occurred on April 25 at the Pharr International Bridge when a CBP officer referred a 2008 Dodge driven by a 58-year-old Mexican citizen for secondary inspection. CBP officers conducted a secondary examination that included utilization of a non-intrusive inspection system and CBP canines. Upon further physical examination, CBP officers discovered 24 packages containing a total of 57 pounds of alleged cocaine within the vehicle. The narcotics had a street value of $761,803.

CBP seized the narcotics and vehicle. Homeland Security Investigations special agents arrested the driver and initiated a criminal investigation.