Secondary Security Screening Selection or Secondary Security Screening Selectee, known by its initials SSSS, is an airport security measure in the United States which selects passengers for additional inspection. People from certain countries are subject to it by default.[1] The passengers may be known as Selectee, Automatic Selectee or the Selectee list.[1] The size and contents of the list fluctuates and is a secret, although the Transportation Security Administration has stated there are tens of thousands of names on it.[2]
The Selectee list has been cited by civil liberties groups to be infringing on privacy rights and potential for racial and ethnic discrimination.[3]
Procedure when selected
Passengers who have been selected for secondary screening will have the letters SSSS or *S* (all capitals) printed on their boarding passes as a signal for the need for a thorough search at security checkpoints.[4] In the case of Southwest Airlines, secondary screening selectees may have a "checkerboard" pattern printed on their boarding passes.[5]
SSSS passengers will go through a more intensive screening process which may include enhanced pat-downs.[clarification needed] Their carry-on luggage may also be inspected by hand. In the case of film or other items that cannot be X-rayed, the agent may perform a test for possible explosive materials. The screener may also use a hand held metal detector to search the passenger for metal objects.[1]
Selection criteria
Neither the TSA nor the airlines publish the criteria that are used when boarding passes are issued to identify passengers who will be given extra screening or be denied boarding.
Random selection, according to TSA spokeswoman Amy Von Walter in 2004,[4] and as suggested by the Washington State branch of the American Civil Liberties Union.[2]
The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) has insisted no minors are listed on the No Fly List or the Selectee List. One minor was placed on this list in 2014 and, as of July 2017[update], minors with similar names to those on the lists still have difficulty in obtaining boarding passes and are subjected to additional screening.[10][11]
^"Gilmore v. Gonzales". FreeToTravel.org. United States District Court, Northern District of California. July 18, 2002. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved October 24, 2015. Southwest... clerk tore up the boarding pass, printed out another one with a checkerboard pattern on it... you become selected for secondary screening...