three months earlier spelling out requirements for potential manufacturers said the machines had to have the capability to capture images of nonpassengers for training and evaluation purposes. the procurement document was recently obtained by epic, the electronic privacy information center. >> we think it's obvious the machines are made to store images. >> the tsa has been lying? >> yes. i would use a more polite word if i could but it would be less accurate. >> reporter: the document specifies to protect privacy during passenger screening there will be no storage or exporting of images. but e.p. i-c. fears the ability to save them during test mode leaves open potential for abuse by insiders and outsiders. the documents say the machines must have hard drives for storage and usb ports and ethernet connectivity that could allow downloading of images. an unspecified number of users including tsa head quartz,