An Iraqi policeman uses a hand-held device that is supposed to detect bombs at a checkpoint in Basra.
Baghdad - The wands were completely bogus. It had been proven years ago, even before 2013 when two British men were convicted in separate trials on fraud charges for selling the detectors.
> The devices turned out to be completely bogus.
> The 'detectors' were based on a product that sold for about $20 and claimed to find golf balls.
> The government continued to use the devices, spending nearly $60 million on them .
> The practice was carried on despite warnings by US military commanders and the wands' proven failure to stop near-daily bombings in Baghdad.
In this Thursday, July 14, 2016 picture, an Iraqi policeman uses a hand-held device that is supposed to detect bombs at a checkpoint in Basra, 340 miles (550 kilometers) southeast of Baghdad, Iraq. For nearly a decade, when you drove through one of Baghdad's seemingly endless checkpoints, a soldier would point a hand-held, gun-shaped device at your vehicle, intently watching if the antenna atop the device moved. If it pointed at your vehicle, the theory was, it had found a possible bomb. The wands were a fake, but it wasn't till a massive bombing this month that the government halted their use. (AP Photo/Nabil al-Jurani)