Boston bombing shows vulnerabilities in public spaces, police say
After bombs ripped through the crowd gathered along the final stretch of the Boston Marathon on Monday, Los Angeles police officials did what they could to calm fears among their own residents.
Standing before a bank of television cameras, LAPD Chief Charlie Beck on Tuesday reiterated that upcoming sporting and cultural events would be patrolled by a higher-than-normal number of officers and bomb-sniffing dogs. He talked cryptically about the secretive work being done by the department’s counter-terrorism units. And he gave out the number for a hotline where people could leave tips about suspicious activity.
But Beck was blunt about the realities of guarding against attacks like the one in Boston: There is only so much police can do.
“In the city of Los Angeles this raises extreme concern. Obviously we are a city that loves its crowds, loves its sporting events, and the Los Angeles Police Department will take every effort to make those safe,” Beck said. “But I want to remind the public of this: Police officers cannot be everywhere. We live in a very mobile, very free society. There are not enough cops to watch everything… Your safety is your responsibility as well as it is mine.”
Large-scale outdoor events and venues present law enforcement with one of its greatest challenges, said Beck and other security experts. With thousands of people often spread over large areas, protest marches, road races, festivals and the like offer would-be attackers myriad opportunities to hide explosives among densely packed crowds.
Given the limitations of police, Beck implored the public repeatedly to report suspicious activity, saying such cooperation “is the only way that we can prevent incidents like this from occuring. There is just too much space to watch and too few officers to do it.”
Beck and others were quick to emphasize that, despite the challenges, police are not helpless when it comes to securing events such as marathons. When Los Angeles hosted its own marathon last month, canines trained in bomb detection were led on a sweep of the entire course before the race. And before hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets of downtown L.A. several years ago for a massive immigration rally, the department spent months gathering intelligence on possible plans for violence and then deployed teams of undercover officers to blend in among the throngs.
“Unfortunately, it’s got to be a continuing effort and that’s why it’s so important for the public to take their part,” he said. “We can keep things clean and pristine for an instant in time but as soon as the crowds descend it is impossible to replicate that over and over again.”
Boston authorties said dogs and officers were used to check the marathon course before the race.
Police are also wise to use surveillance cameras and tighter security in the densely crowded areas of an event -- such as the starting line of a race -- that could make for the most appealing targets, said Henry Willis, director of the Homeland Security and Defense Center at RAND Corp.
“There’s a double-edged sword when you have a public event like this,” he said. “Whenever a large number of people come together it creates a target for someone who wants to hurt people in a very public way. But at the same time law enforcement knows that, so we’re able to step up security.”
Police in Los Angeles, as in other large cities, have committed significant resources to counter-terrorism efforts since the 9/11 attacks. Here, a few hundred officers are thought to work in the LAPD’s Counter-Terrorism and Special Operations Bureau gathering intelligence and investigating possible suspects.
One unit within the bureau assists private security teams at iconic locations and other possible high-value targets, such as the U.S. Bank Tower, to improve their defenses. Undercover officers in the unit have been known to try to breach a venue’s security to expose weak points.
Los Angeles has been a terrorist target before. Ahmed Ressam was sentenced to 37 years in federal prison for plotting to bomb Los Angeles International Airport in 2001. And, in 2004, law enforcement officials said they believed that Al Qaeda operatives had planned to hijack an airliner and crash it into the U.S. Bank tower, then called the Library Tower, in a West Coast follow-up to the 9/11 attacks.
Authorities in London are confronting those same issues this week as they plan to deploy 4,000 officers Wednesday along the route of a funeral procession of former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and then brace for the arrival Sunday of about 30,000 runners in that city’s marathon.
Britain’s minister for sport, Hugh Robertson, said he was “absolutely confident” the race could take place safely in the British capital, which last year successfully hosted the Summer Olympics. The London Marathon is one of the world’s most prestigious and popular long-distance running competitions, which passes or travels over such landmarks as Big Ben, Buckingham Palace and Tower Bridge, any one of which would make for a prime terrorist target..
Robertson said in a radio interview that London had “enormous experience” in dealing with security for high-profile events, adding: “This is one of those instances where the best way to show solidarity with Boston is to continue and send a very clear message to those responsible that we won’t be blown off course.”
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joel.rubin@latimes.com
kim.murphy@latimes.com
andrew.blankstein@latimes.com
Times staff writers Laura Nelson and Henry Chu contributed to this report.
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