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Cellphone Detectors
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Cellphone Jammers
See the secret video of the GunCellphone
in action
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Hitting the 5, 6, 7 and 8
buttons on the
gunphone fires four .22 caliber rounds
in quick succession.

At first sight it looks like a
regular cell phone — same size, same shape, same overall appearance.
But beneath the digital face lies a .22-caliber pistol, a phone gun capable
of firing four rounds in quick succession with a touch of the otherwise
standard keypad.
The US Department of Homeland
Security and the FBI are aware of the device and have instructed baggage
screeners to be on the lookout for suspicious mobile phones. This is
especially after 9/11.
European law enforcement officials — stunned by the discovery of these
deadly decoys — say phone guns are changing the rules of engagement in
Europe.
Airport authorities across Europe are implementing systems to X-ray all cell
phones
“We find it very, very alarming,” says Wolfgang Dicke of the German Police
union. “It means police will have to draw their weapons whenever a person
being checked reaches for their mobile phone.”
The FBI, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms, and the U.S. Customs Service say they’ve been briefed on the new
weapons.
“This criminal invention represents a potentially serious threat to law
enforcement and the public,” said U.S. Customs Service Commissioner Raymond
W. Kelly.
“We received word about these guns last month. We have since alerted our
field personnel to be on the lookout for ‘cell phone guns’ at U.S. ports of
entry.”
Guns on the Move
These new covert guns were first discovered in October when Dutch police
stumbled on a cache during a drug raid in Amsterdam.
In another recent incident a Croatian gun dealer was caught attempting to
smuggle a shipment through Slovenia into Western Europe.
Police say both shipments are believed to have originated in Yugoslavia.
Interpol sent out a warning to law enforcement agencies around the world.
European border police and customs officers are at a heightened state of
alert at all ports, airports and border crossings.Realistic Appearance
‘If you didn’t know they were guns, you wouldn’t suspect anything,” said Ari
Zandbergen, spokesman for the Amsterdam police.
“Only when you have one in your hand do you realize that they are heavier,”
says Birgit Heib of the German Federal Criminal Investigation Agency.
The guns are loaded by twisting the phone in half. The .22-caliber rounds
fit into the top of the phone under the screen. The lower half, under the
keyboard, holds the firing pins. The bullets fire through the antenna by
pressing the keypad from numbers five to eight.
Amsterdam police says they are very sophisticated machines constructed
inside gutted cell phones which do not light up or operate as real phones.
“These are very difficult to make. We believe experts are involved,” says
Zandbergen.
U.S. authorities, including the FBI, ATF, Federal Aviation Administration
and the U.S. Customs Service Authority have been supplied detailed
information and pictures of these new weapons.
“They’ve been given a heads up,” said Jim Crandall, ATF spokesman.
To date no phone guns have been discovered either in the United States or in
the process of being smuggled in, authorities say. But they know it’s only a
matter of time.
FAA spokeswoman Rebecca Trexler said airport security officers had been
trained to deal with this new threat.
“We don’t want to tell the bad guys exactly what we’re looking for,” she
says, “We are trying to stay one step ahead.”Will Affect Travelers
Airport authorities across Europe are implementing systems to X-ray all cell
phones, those procedures will likely be followed by airports around the
world.
“This is just one more item that we need to pay special attention to because
nowadays, of course just about every passenger carries a mobile phone,” says
the spokesman for Frankfurt airport security.
Customs officials in the U.S. say their safety procedure has normally been
to require travelers to turn their phones on, however that may no longer be
enough. Cell phone users will have to be made aware that reaching for their
phones in some circumstances could be misinterpreted as a threat by
authorities.
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