US | TSA Screeners Will Roam Airports, Test Random Fliers Portable detectors will take swabs from hands, luggage By Nick McMaster Posted Feb 17, 2010 4:58 PM CST Copied In this Jan. 4 file photo, TSA officer Robert Howard signals an airline passenger forward at a security check-point at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, in SeaTac, Wash. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson, file) TSA screeners will take a more proactive approach to finding explosives in airports under a new security program. Screeners will walk around airport gates and security lines with portable explosives detectors, taking swabs from random passengers' hands and luggage. The security agency first ran a test of the program after the attempted bombing on Christmas Day and plans to make it nationwide in a few weeks. "Had (Farouk) Abdulmutallab been subjected to a chemical inspection, there's a high probability it would have picked up the explosives," a RAND Corp. security analyst tells USA Today, explaining the reasoning behind the program. It will "create increasing uncertainty for the adversaries, which is always positive." Read These Next Baseball has a dirty secret hiding in plain sight. In Taiwan, a strange controversy over blood donations. Royal Opera House the scene of a surprise protest. Newborn's sex isn't random, research suggests. Report an error