This INFOGRAM will be distributed weekly to provide members of the Emergency Services Sector with information concerning the protection of their critical infrastructures. For further information, contact the Emergency Management and Response - Information Sharing and Analysis Center (EMR-ISAC) at (301) 447-1325 or by e-mail at emr-isac@dhs.gov.
Receive Infograms and Bulletins by E-mail
Considering the increased use of secondary explosive devices (SEDs) in several foreign nations, Emergency Services Sector (ESS) personnel occasionally express their concern in various forums about being confronted with SEDs at incidents within the United States. Instances of SEDs targeting American emergency personnel are uncommon according to research by the Emergency Management and Response – nformation Sharing and Analysis Center (EMR-ISAC). However, former Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said a few months ago that ESS departments and agencies "need to understand the latest terrorist bomb-making techniques being used overseas if they are to help thwart domestic bombings and the existence of a secondary device."
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) reports that SEDs are bombs placed at the scene of an ongoing emergency response that are intended to cause casualties among first responders. "These devices are typically designed to explode after a primary explosion or other major emergency response event has attracted large numbers of responders to the scene to inflict additional casualties, create fear and confusion, disrupt command and control, and prevent rescue operations." SEDs could be hidden in everyday objects, be part of a sequential attack, or detonated later after the initial attack.
The following basic guidelines for ESS organizations were derived by the EMR-ISAC from multiple sources and reviewed here for the benefit of emergency planning and training:
For frequently asked questions about SEDs, see the OSHA website at http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/emergencypreparedness/guides/secondary.html.
The Department of Defense developed Terrorist Recognition Cards to increase awareness and recognition of high-threat terrorists. These cards contain images of terrorists and related biographic information. Included among the cards are known terrorists from five different geographic regions: Afghanistan/Pakistan, Iraq, the Horn of Africa, Arabian Peninsula, and Southeast Asia.
The Emergency Management and Response – nformation Sharing and Analysis Center (EMR-ISAC) examined many of the cards in the collection, which is not an exhaustive compilation. For example, the cards do not include many known high-threat terrorists for whom pictures are not available or for whom only limited biographic information is available.
Although the pictured terrorists will likely alter their appearance to avoid capture, the Defense Intelligence Agency requests anyone with information about individuals in the Terrorist Recognition Cards should contact the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). The EMR-ISAC offers the following link for more information about the FBI's Most Wanted Terrorists: http://www.fbi.gov/wanted/terrorists/fugitives.htm. The online version of the Terrorist Recognition Cards can be seen at http://www.dia.mil/site6_images/cards/index.htm.
In February, the Radiological Threat Awareness Coalition (R-TAC) sponsored the 2009 Radiological Threat Summit in Washington, D.C. Focusing on the Emergency Services Sector (ESS), conference speaker Jeffrey Runge, M.D., former Chief Medical Officer for the Department of Homeland Security, acknowledged that in "an uncommon situation, especially one that involves a possible radiological threat�the public expects [responders] to know what to do." "It's imperative," he said, that they "be prepared and have the tools to do just that." (http://www.r-tac.org/summit_video.html)
As part of his guidance to senior leaders of emergency organizations, Dr. Runge stressed the importance of responders becoming familiar with their local radiation safety officer, and the individual's capabilities and resources. Based on Dr. Runge's suggestions, and an interview with Brooke Buddemeier of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratories, the Emergency Management and Response – nformation Sharing and Analysis Center (EMR-ISAC) assembled resources relevant for responses to radiological incidents and those involving radiological dispersal devices (dirty bombs).
Three educational supplements that inform and advise responders about the threat and dangers of cyanide are available from the Cyanide Poisoning Treatment Coalition (CPTC), a non-profit organization whose members include physicians as well as Emergency Services Sector (ESS) organizations and personnel.
The Emergency Management and Response – nformation Sharing and Analysis Center (EMR-ISAC) summarized the three publications as follows for the benefit of ESS departments and agencies:
For more information about this safety and survival threat to responders, and to inspect offerings from the Cyanide Poisoning Treatment Coalition, visit http://www.firesmoke.org. The EMR-ISAC notes that all three supplements with download links have been compiled at http://www.bigmedicine.ca/specialfeature.htm.