Agencies Clash on Fingerprint Database

51 minutes ago White House - AP Cabinet & State


By CURT ANDERSON, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - More than three years after the Sept. 11 attacks, the Bush
administration has failed to create a unified U.S. fingerprint database
because of agency infighting, meaning most visitors to the country still
aren't fully screened for terrorist or criminal ties, the Justice
Department's watchdog warned Wednesday.

Continued bureaucratic clashing - the very behavior the Bush administration
pledged to end after the attacks - "creates a risk that a terrorist could
enter the country undetected," said Inspector General Glenn A. Fine in his
fourth report about the problem.

Despite some improvement, the Justice, State and Homeland Security
departments are at an impasse over such basic issues as whether two or 10
fingers should be printed at U.S. borders and which law enforcement agencies
should have access to immigration information.


"Progress toward the longer-term goal of making all biometric fingerprint
systems fully interoperable has stalled," Fine's report concluded.


Without an integrated system, the review found that watch lists used to
check certain visitors at the borders contain only a small portion of the 47
million records in FBI (news - web sites) fingerprint files - the Integrated
Automated Fingerprint Identification System, or IAFIS - and that these
incomplete lists are prone to error.


Current Homeland Security plans call for fingerprint checking against FBI
files of fewer than 1 percent of the estimated 118,000 daily U.S. visitors
whose prints should be checked, or fewer than 1,180. Yet by the end of 2005,
the officials expect to check only about 800 people a day against the FBI
database.

"The likelihood of missing a criminal alien or terrorist is increased"
without expanded use of the FBI files, Fine said.

Since the 2001 attacks, Congress has repeatedly pushed the agencies to
devise a single, quick fingerprint identification system that could be used
by all law enforcement agencies as well as immigration and intelligence
officials. The agencies' inability to reach common ground runs counter to
the repeated pledges of cooperation that followed the Sept. 11 attacks.

The agencies "have different sets of mission objectives, and each one has
been a forceful advocate for its respective position," said Justice
Department top administrative official Paul Corts.

One key unresolved question is how many fingers should be printed and how.
The Justice Department sides with the National Institute of Standards and
Technology, which has recommended taking 10 "flat" fingerprints along with a
digital photograph of the individual. These "flat" prints, NIST says, are
almost as accurate as the "rolled" fingerprints favored by the FBI and
should take only 10 to 15 seconds longer than taking just two finger prints.

The Homeland Security and State departments, which now take only two finger
prints, disagree with NIST. In a letter to Fine, Homeland Security
Undersecretary Asa Hutchinson cited "inaccuracies and incorrect assumptions"
in the review, including estimated costs, time delays and workload increases
of moving to a 10-print system.

The system "is not designed for booking criminals," Hutchinson said, but is
intended as a "lookout" for suspect individuals.

Janice L. Jacobs, the State Department's top visa services official, said a
test program in Monterrey, Mexico, found that it took up to a minute longer
to take 10 prints. "Adding one minute of processing time to 7 million visa
applications annually has significant workload implications," Jacobs wrote
to Fine.

Homeland Security officials also have resisted giving the FBI and other law
enforcement agencies access to its visitor records, partly to ensure the
privacy of those individuals.

In addition, the problem of inaccuracies in various watch lists has occurred
repeatedly since Sept. 11, and some groups have complained loudly that they
are unfairly singled out for scrutiny.

One such incident occurred earlier this week when about 40 American Muslims
were held for questioning and fingerprinted as they returned to the United
States via Niagara Falls, N.Y., from an Islamic conference in Toronto,
Canada. Some were held for up to six hours Sunday night and early Monday.

"The image of a room full of American Muslim citizens apparently being held
solely because of their faith and the fact that they attended an Islamic
conference is one that should be disturbing to all Americans who value
religious freedom," said Nihad Awad, executive director of the Council on
American-Islamic Relations.

Fine made a number of recommendations intended to accelerate progress on the
fingerprint system, warning that further delays will increase costs.

On top of that, he warned that the current FBI fingerprint file's capacity
to handle search requests could be severely taxed - meaning more system
outages and delays - if all foreign visitors envisioned are checked.

___
On the Net:

Justice Department inspector general: www.usdoj.gov/oig

http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20041229/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/finge
rprints_database_5




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