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‘This proposal has been implemented only to

the following extent:

The Coast Guard has acquired

138 portable devices ($96,000) and the Customs 6 sta-

.

tionary and 13 portable devices ($39,000); and the

Treasury is not asking for funds for FY 1959 to augment the number of devices.

"(c)

Under this situation, the Immigration Ser-

vice (Justice), which conducts inspections for Customs
in certain instances, has not put into operation the

31 portable detection devices ($21,000) which it ac-

quired under the limited program accepted by the IIC
and ICIS.

"(a)

Nevertheless, it is interesting to note

that the devices used by the Coast Guard and Customs
have, during the brief period of their use, detected
smuggled watches with radioactive dials, which when

sold by the Government realized $136,000 and brought
in $6,000 in fines; and have revealed radioactive ore
samples coming from unexpected geographical areas."

General Cutler then called on Mr. Hoover, Chairman of the

Interdepartmental Intelligence Conference (IIC), who stated that

from an internal security and intelligence point of view, the devices should be used wherever it is practicable to do so at ports
of entry. It was his thought that the present device program should
be expanded to the extent that budgetary limits permit. He said
that while the present devices are not perfect, they are beneficial
from the standpoint of the clandestine entry problem, and they do
serve as a deterrent to clandestine introduction.
Mr. Yeagley, Chairman of the Interdepartmental Committee

on Internal Security (ICIS), was of the view that the devices will

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The Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission indicated
that no one thought these devices were perfect and they were never
so represented. It was his view that the present devices constitute a deterrent and therefore available devices should be used.
Admiral Strauss then referred to the old problem of what agency
should be responsible for bearing the cost of these devices and
for operating them. He said that all agencies concerned with the
problem, except the Treasury Department, were of the view that the
Treasury should bear the cost. He assumed that this was no longer

& problem, however, inasmuch as the devices have paid for them-

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selves through recoveries resulting from detections made by the
devices.

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