WASHINGTON (AP) - Law enforcement officials bracing for the largest crowds in
inaugural history are preparing far-reaching security - thousands
of video cameras, sharpshooters, air patrols - to safeguard
President-elect Barack Obama's swearing-in.
People attending the ceremony and parade on Jan. 20 can expect
to be searched by machines, security personnel or both. Precautions
will range from the routine - magnetometers like those used at
airports - to countersnipers trained to hit a target the size of a
teacup saucer from 1,000 yards away. Plus undercover officers, bomb
sniffing dogs and air patrols.
The Secret Service - the agency coordinating the security - also
has assigned trained officials to identify and prevent cyber
security risks. And, as it does at every inauguration, the service
has mapped out escape routes for the 44th president.
In addition Washington's 5,265 surveillance cameras, spread
around the city, are expected to be fed into a multi-agency command
center.
"When you have an event like the inauguration, the more eyes we
have in and around the city the better off we are," District of
Columbia Police Chief Cathy Lanier said. Streets will be closed
within seven-to-eight blocks on both sides of Pennsylvania Avenue,
and two-to-three blocks around each inaugural ball site, she
said.
The already-high security for inaugurations was intensified in
January 2005, for the first swearing-in after the September 11,
2001, terrorist attacks, and this year's will follow that
heightened model.
"I think you're going to get people from all walks of life come
into Washington, so I think that there will be a tremendous influx
of people that will come early, that will camp out early and that
will probably remain, you know, to continue the festivities," said
Nick Trotta, assistant director of the Secret Service's Protective
Division.
The inauguration is designated a National Special Security
Event, giving the Secret Service the lead among 58 law enforcement
agencies involved in the security planning and execution. As the
date gets closer, the service could decide to extend the special
security designation to Jan. 19 - Martin Luther King Day - when
large crowds are expected to begin gathering in Washington.
There's a bit of a home-team advantage for the Secret Service
and law enforcement agencies. All of the Secret Service's law
enforcement partners are in D.C., and they've worked together on
similar events - most recently the G-20 summit on Nov. 14-15.
At this point, the Secret Service does not have an estimate on
how many people are expected for the inauguration. Reports that as
many as 4 million people would come could not be corroborated with
law enforcement agencies.
But officials expect to see more people at this inauguration
than any other in the past.
The National Park Service says the largest crowd ever on the
National Mall was for President Lyndon B. Johnson's 1965
inauguration. At the time, the park service estimated 1.2 million
people attended the event.
Trotta acknowledged the reemergence of hate groups through the
presidential campaign and since Obama's election. Threats against
Obama have been higher than any other president-elect in history.
From Maine to Idaho, law enforcement officials have seen
potentially threatening writings, racist Internet postings and
other activity.
"It is a very historic inauguration - it is the first
African-American to be sworn in as president," Trotta said. "But
that's just a factor. Of course we're not saying it doesn't play a
role, but it's not the security issue."
The security plans have not been completed, but Trotta expects
the parade route and swearing-in to be the same as in past years.
He would not say whether Obama would get out of his car during the
parade or if Obama would be surrounded by bulletproof glass at the
speaking podiums, as he was in Chicago on election night.
There has never been an assassination attempt at a presidential
inauguration.
Trotta said motorcades always present line-of-sight issues, and
the inaugural parade is no exception.
"The exposure's there. The length of time is there. It's a
parade. We're moving the White House in the middle of a parade,"
Trotta said.
There has been no specific intelligence pointing to a potential
terrorist attack during the inauguration, said Joseph Persichini
Jr., assistant FBI director in charge of the Washington Field
Office.
"But we're always vigilant," he said, adding that visitors
should help by watching for any suspicious activity.
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Associated Press Writer Nafeesa Syeed contributed to this
report.