Cellular Activity
        When mobile phones threaten security, it’s time to ‘decellerate’
        
        
			- By Ronnie Rittenberry
 - Feb 01, 2012
 
		
        
		This just in: There are now more
  cell phone users on the planet
  than wearers of shoes. That
  random yet eye-opening nugget comes
  courtesy of WikiAnswers, so consider
  the source, but still: more than shoes?
  
It’s no newsflash that we now inhabit
  a cell-centric world. The increase
  in the number of mobile phones in the
  past decade has been exponential and
  very visible (and, if you frequent some
  of the same stores, restaurants, trains
  and sidewalks as I, you can attest it’s
  also been a very audible proliferation).
  Cell users are literally everywhere you
  turn. And too many of them have obnoxious
  ringtones.
Celler’s Market
  
According to the International Telecommunication
  Union, which is the
  United Nation’s specialized agency for
  information and communication technologies,
  there are, as of press time, 5.9
  billion mobile-cellular subscriptions.
  That’s an impressive number in itself,
  but it’s even more remarkable considering
  the world’s population is, also at
  press time and according to the U.S.
  Census Bureau, 6.9 billion. (The number
  of people who at least wear foot
  coverings is 4.5 billion, as estimated by
  the folks at Wiki.)
  
As far as inventions go, those numbers
  put the cell phone right up there
  with the wheel or, well, shoes. Wireless
  technology continues to transform lives
  and to become ever more integrated
  in—if not essential to—the human
  condition. And for the most part that’s
  an entirely good thing.
  
The benefits of cell phones in emergency
  situations are undisputed, and,
  in this age of multitasking, no one can
  argue against the devices’ advantages
  in terms of scheduling, connecting
  and saving time. They provide a convenience
  almost unheard of 10 years ago.
  
Yet, cells also have their downside,
  and as those in the security industry
  know, annoying ringtones and users
  who insist on conducting personal
  conversations in public places (loudly)
  are the least of it. In the wrong hands,
  mobile phones can too easily be used to
  breach security, threaten safety or even
  commit crimes. When any of those outcomes
  are distinct possibilities, there
  arises the need to know where the devices
  are, to be able to track them and
  to prevent their use. And because this
  need is more prevalent than one might
  at first think, the business of cell phone
  detection has relatively quietly become
  an industry all its own.
  
Phone Homing
  
If you consider it, there are any number
  of places that commonly have “No
  Cell” zones. Courtrooms, classrooms,
  conference rooms, commercial jet cabins
  and movie theaters typically have
  policies either prohibiting or limiting
  wireless use. And if you’ve frequented
  any of those rooms in the past year, you
  know that in all of them people just as
  typically ignore those policies—some
  surreptitiously, some flagrantly.
  
Scott Schober, president and CEO
  of Berkeley Varitronics Systems (www.
  bvsystems.com), has sold cell phonedetection
  units to all of the above venues,
  and he said the demand at such
  locations is on the rise. His company,
  based in Metuchen, N.J, specializes
  in designing and manufacturing the
  units. Some of the devices are handheld,
  some are made for mounting on
  walls and at entrances, and still others
  are custom-crafted for countersurveillance,
  made to fit covertly inside water
  bottles or hollowed-out books. All the
  models home in on the RF signature
  of nearby cell phones in either standby
  or active voice, text or data-transmission
  mode, enabling the operator to
  precisely pinpoint where the wireless
  activity is happening.
  
“Everybody has mobile phones
  these days, and so people can do videos
  and take pictures, people can listen in
  on conversations, and in a lot of environments
  that can be very dangerous—
  it can be a compromise of security,”
  Schobel said. “As phones get smaller
  and smaller, it gets harder to enforce
  the no-cell environments; people can
  smuggle them in in all different ways.
  We’ve been effective by the fact that our
  tools are lower cost, and they home and
  find the phones and get them out, one
  at a time.”
  
Cells within Cells
  
Where most of the mobile phone smuggling
  is happening these days is at the
  nation’s 8,000-plus jails and prisons,
  where inmates are willing to pay corrupt
  guards upward of $500 for a single
  phone rather than use the facility’s builtin,
  monitored, one-way, collect-call-only
  landlines. Prisoners then use the contraband
  cells to contact outside gang
  members, intimidate witnesses, relay
  information on transportation of other
  inmates and otherwise conduct criminal
  activity from inside prison walls. Schobel
  said that at this point roughly half
  of his cell-detection business is centered
  on correctional facilities.
  
“The problem is at epidemic proportions
  in these places,” he said. “It’s
  not that there are five or 10 phones
  in a facility. We’re talking in California
  prisons alone, we’ll find probably
  10,000 to 15,000 phones just this year.
  It’s staggering.”
  
The other major areas for wireless
  detection today include installments at
  some of the more than 10,000 federal
  facilities in the nation, most of which
  are designed to be either highly secure
  or outright SCIF (Sensitive Compartmented
  Information Facility)-grade
  secure. By design, access to SCIFs is
  severely limited, and all the activity,
  conversation and data inside these enclosed
  locations is supposed to be secure
  and classified and thus no place
  for a mobile phone.
  
Because Berkeley Varitronics’ line of
  detectors also home in on GPS trackers,
  the devices are being deployed for
  border security and drug enforcement.
  Schobel said one of the most rewarding
  uses of the equipment, though, is
  as search and rescue tools for finding
  people who are lost or, say, trapped
  under rubble after a building collapses.
  It is, he said, another of the upsides involved
  with virtually everyone carrying
  a phone.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        This article originally appeared in the February 2012 issue of Security Today.