Competitors
Products Failures
Explosive Detector
Failures

'Bomb detector'
maker Jim McCormick arrested
Jim McCormick sells the hand-held detectors
from his offices in Somerset. The director
of a company which sold a bomb-detecting
device to 20 countries, including Iraq,
has been arrested.
ATSC's Jim McCormick, 53, was detained on
Friday on suspicion of fraud by misrepresentation,
Avon and Somerset police said. He has since
been bailed. It comes after a BBC investigation
alleged the ADE-651 did not work.
Earlier, the British government
announced a ban on the export of the device
to Iraq and Afghanistan, where British forces
are serving. Anti-theft tag Mr McCormick
has said the device, sold from offices in
Sparkford, Somerset, used special electronic
cards slotted into it to detect explosives.
But a BBC Newsnight investigation reported
that a computer laboratory said the card
it examined contained only a tag used by
shops to prevent theft. There are concerns
the detectors have failed to stop bomb attacks
which have killed hundreds of people.
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| The
ADE-651 is in use at most checkpoints
in Baghdad. |
The device consists of
a swivelling aerial mounted to a hinge on
a hand-grip. It does not operate by battery,
instead promotional material says it is
powered only by the user's static electricity.
The ADE-651 has been sold
to a range of Middle Eastern countries and
as far afield as Bangkok. The Iraqi government
has spent US$85m (£52m) on the hand-held
detectors, now used at most checkpoints
in Baghdad. It is understood Iraq paid about
US$40,000 for each device. No Western government
uses them. The BBC has learned the Iraqi
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has ordered
an investigation into the bomb detectors,
expected to report shortly. The government
ban, brought in by Business Secretary Lord
Mandelson, starts next week.
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