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5th District Public Affairs

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News Release

Date: May 12, 2010

Contact: Public Affairs Det. Baltimore

(757) 309-3828

Multi-agency operation focuses on shipping regulations in Port of Baltimore

BALTIMORE - Petty Officer 2nd Class Tonya Mulhern, a marine science technician at Coast Guard Sector Baltimore, and Hector Carrion, a Customs and Border Protection officer, stand by while a container is inspected with a Vehicle and Cargo Inspection System, a tool used for non-intrusive inspections of containers. The VCIS takes X-ray images of containers in order to find illegal cargo such as narcotics. U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Robert Brazzell. BALTIMORE Ð Coast Guard Sector Baltimore members, along with Department of Transportation officials and Customs and Border Protection officers, inspect two containers at the entrance to the Seagirt Marine Terminal during a Multi-Agency Strike Force Operation, May 12, 2010. The Coast Guard often partners with agencies to increase protection and decrease criminal activity in the ports of Baltimore. U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Robert Brazzell.
BALTIMORE Ð Petty Officer 2nd Class Tonya Mulhern, a marine science technician at Coast Guard Sector Baltimore, inspections under a shipping container during a Multi-Agency Strike Force Operation held at the Seagirt Marine Terminal, May 12, 2010. The Coast Guard grouped with partnering agencies such as Customs and Border Protection, Department of Transportation and the Department of Homeland Security. U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Robert Brazzell. BALTIMORE Ð Officer James David, a member of Customs and Border Protection, exits a shipping container during a Multi-Agency Strike Force Operation with the Coast Guard and other agencies, May 12, 2010. The MASFO consisted of container inspections, Transportation Worker Identification Credential card verifications and checking of each containerÕs shipping documents. U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 3rd Class Robert Brazzell.

 

BALTIMORE - The Coast Guard, along with federal, state and local agencies, conducted a joint operation that started Tuesday and ended Wednesday at the Maryland Port Administration's Seagirt and Dundalk Marine Terminals to promote awareness and verify compliance with federal and state intermodal container, truck, air, rail and hazardous material safety regulations.

Inspections on containers and trucks entering and leaving the Port of Baltimore are frequently conducted by individual agencies focusing on a specific part of the overall safety picture, but this multi-agency strike force operation is one in a series of similar initiatives conducted in ports nationwide since September 1998 that brings the whole picture together and reduces the inspection time delay for shippers.

This joint operation is coordinated between agencies employing their individual jurisdictions side-by-side, so that shipments can be simultaneously inspected for compliance with all applicable requirements.

The operation involved the inspection of trucks as they entered and left the marine terminals with shipments from both domestic and international locations. Inspections included verifying proper truck and container documentation, structural integrity of shipping containers, licensing, customs and fuel tax compliance and hazardous material markings, packaging and segregation.

Agencies taking part in the operation included: the Coast Guard, Customs and Border Protection, Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration, Federal Motor Carriers Safety Administration, Maryland Transportation Authority Police, Maryland Port Administration, Maryland State Police, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Transportation Security Administration, Maryland State Comptrollers, Federal Railroad Administration, Department of Transportation, Office of the Inspector General, the Federal Bureau of Investigations, the Department of Homeland Security and the Federal Aviation Administration.

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