Hurdles for High-Tech Efforts to Track Who Crosses Borders


By
<http://query.nytimes.com/search/query?ppds=bylL&v1=ERIC%20LIPTON&fdq=199601
01&td=sysdate&sort=newest&ac=ERIC%20LIPTON&inline=nyt-per> ERIC LIPTON

New York Times

August 10, 2005


Hurdles for Biometrics


Jeff Topping for The New York Times


A fingerprint ID scanner is used by the Border Patrol in Nogales, Ariz.

 

WASHINGTON, Aug. 7 - The federal government has been pouring hundreds of
millions of dollars into the once-obscure science called biometrics,
producing some successes but also fumbles in a campaign intended to track
foreigners visiting the country and the activities of some Americans.

Hoping to block the entry of criminals and terrorists into the United States
and to improve the enforcement of immigration laws, government officials
have in the past several years created enormous new repositories of
digitally recorded biometric data - including fingerprints and facial
characteristics - that can be used to identify more than 45 million
foreigners. Federal agencies have also assembled data on more than 70
million Americans in an effort to speed law-abiding travelers through
checkpoints and to search for domestic terrorists. 

The immigration control and antiterrorism campaign was spurred by the Sept.
11 attacks and subsequent Congressional mandates to improve the nation's
security. But the effort has fallen far short of its goals, provoking
criticism that the government is committed to a technological solution so
ambitious that it will either never work or be achieved only at an
unacceptably high price.

"I am not satisfied," said Representative Dan Lungren, Republican of
California, who is chairman of a House panel that helps oversee the effort.
"We are stumbling toward progress. I would hope we would be sprinting." 

In defending its record, the Department of Homeland Security points to
arrests along the nation's borders. In the past year, thanks to a new system
that allows Border Patrol agents to check quickly and comprehensively the
fingerprints of every illegal immigrant detained near the border, officers
have identified 437 people wanted, previously charged or convicted of
homicide; 579 who had sexual assault records and more than 18,000 others
with records involving robberies, drugs, kidnappings or assaults. 

The State Department said new facial recognition software had also uncovered
visa fraud. The software identified 5,731 applicants to the annual visa
lottery program who had doctored their names or otherwise cheated. They
included people who each submitted at least a dozen applications and tried
to disguise themselves with different hairstyles, glasses or expressions. 

But the biometric effort still has a long way to go. The State Department,
for example, recently started to test so-called electronic passports that
contain a small computer chip that holds a digital photograph of the owner.
[The department announced on Tuesday that it would begin issuing the
electronic passports in December.] But even with the chip, officials at
entry points will only have a bigger photograph to compare with the person
seeking entry instead of a computer-based biometric analysis that could
determine with certainty whether the passport holder was the legal passport
owner.

"When it's all in place, there's still no real additional security or at
least it's of marginal value," Representative Christopher Cox, Republican of
California, said before he stepped down as chairman of the House Committee
on Homeland Security to become the head of the Securities and Exchange
Commission. 

In all but a few locations, another new program, US-Visit - which has cost
$1 billion and could exceed $10 billion - can only record foreigners'
arrivals, not their departures, meaning it is far from delivering on its
promise of creating an immigration tracking system. 

The high cost comes from the extensive computer networks that must be built
to tie together the data and make it accessible to United States officials
around the world.

"We are still just in the formative stages of this," said Rey Koslowski, a
political science professor at the University at Albany and the author of a
recent report that questioned whether the program's goals could ever be met.
"Now may be the time to scale back the mission."

The science of biometrics relies on unique human characteristics - including
fingerprints, facial dimensions or the rings and furrows in the colored
tissue of the eye - that can verify a person's identity. The government
programs that rely on biometrics - at least eight are under way at the
Homeland Security and State Departments alone - want to remove the
uncertainty involved in using a traditional passport, visa or other
identification document. 

The enhanced screening starts at the 207 State Department visa processing
locations around the world. Since late last year, almost all applicants must
be fingerprinted and submit a photograph. The prints are transmitted to
Washington, where the Department of Homeland Security compares them to a
database of about five million people, mostly criminals, who may be
ineligible to receive a visa. 

In rural Kentucky, the State Department has put another biometric tool to
work. At its visa processing center there, staff members use facial
recognition software to compare applicants against a database of digital
images of 45 million foreigners - collected from a decade's worth of
applications - to see if any had previously applied under a different
identity. The screening is being tested on small numbers of applications but
will be expanded to all applications starting next year.

Facial recognition systems, which look at skin texture and the facial
geography like the distances between the eye sockets or the point of a nose
and an eyebrow, are much less accurate than fingerprint-based systems,
requiring members of the State Department to examine every reported match. 

But the system has been effective, particularly as a fraud-prevention tool
in the competition for 50,000 special immigration visas that the State
Department offers each year. 

The software also spotted the same photograph of a Cambodian child in nine
applications with different names, dates of birth and sets of parents. 

The screening continues when foreigners come into the country. At domestic
security checkpoints, visitors with visas are again fingerprinted and
photographed to verify that they are the same people who were given the
travel documents. If they are from 27 so-called visa waiver nations - mostly
in Europe - they are fingerprinted and photographed for the first time. The
federal government uses the data to check against watch lists and to share
with law enforcement officials. 

Perhaps the most effective effort so far is along the Mexican border, in
places like Nogales, Ariz. More than 490,000 people were caught near Nogales
last year trying to enter the United States illegally. 

Five years ago, the only way to conduct a comprehensive criminal check of
fingerprints was to fax the prints to a central processing center, which
could take hours. 

By last year, all 136 Border Patrol stations were linked to the F.B.I.
fingerprint system, which produces results in two minutes. 

The checks turned up 113,747 criminal record hits in the last 11 months, or
about 7 out of every 50 detainees, compared with 1 in 50 before the new
system was installed, a Customs and Border Patrol official said. 

"Before, you might have a hunch that some guy was not right, but there was
nothing you could do to check further - you just did not have the time,"
Luke Bilow, a senior patrol agent at Nogales, said.

Among those identified were fugitives that included Francisco Martínez, a
Mexican wanted for questioning last year in connection with the killing of
his cousin in Florida. Mr. Martínez had fled while the investigation was
under way, but turned up at a Border Patrol roadside stop in New Mexico. 

The federal government also intends to use biometrics to screen Americans.
The State Department has assembled a database of high-resolution digital
images of passport applications - including photographs - submitted in the
past decade by 70 million Americans. 

In conjunction with facial recognition technology, the photos may eventually
be used to detect fraudulent passport applications, one State Department
official said. Law enforcement officials at the National Counterterrorism
Center now have access to the photos for investigations into possible
terrorist activity. 

At six American airports, A.T.M.-like machines automatically read
fingerprints and do eye scans of the irises of passengers enrolled in
Registered Traveler, a Homeland Security Department program intended to
speed the movement of "trusted travelers," who also had to undergo
background checks. 

The cost of the program has been modest, $20 million in the last two years.
But many critics question its value. Relatively few passengers take part
because they must still wait in line to pass through metal detectors and
have their bags X-rayed. 

At Reagan National Airport outside Washington last Monday morning, one of
the busiest times of the week, not a single passenger used the Registered
Traveler ID machines for an hour, while hundreds of others passed through
the regular checkpoints. 

"It offers no benefit to our passengers," Robert Isom, a Northwest Airlines
senior vice president, told a House panel in June. 

Mr. Isom suggested that officials consider abandoning the program. 

Starting this week, the Homeland Security Department is testing a system
that automatically tracks people as they cross land borders by issuing visas
that transmit radio signals. But critics have pointed out that a person
intent on circumventing the system could simply give his visa to someone
else to carry across the border, because there is no biometric check. 

"If we ever catch a terrorist, we will only catch an extremely dumb
terrorist," said a federal official who asked not to be named because he was
criticizing the program he was involved in. 

Representative Lungren said it was even more disturbing that the State
Department accepted as proof of identity for passport applications documents
like birth certificates that could easily be forged. In such cases,
biometric-based technologies could actually help a smart terrorist. 

"What we may have done, in some ways, is give terrorists or criminals
tamperproof, fake ID's," he said.But federal officials say patience is
required as the biometrics push gets under way.

"These things are tough," said James A. Williams, director of US-Visit.
"They take time."




 


Jeff Topping for The New York Times


Scanned fingerprints can be viewed on a computer monitor.

 





Stephen Crowley/The New York Times


A biometrics system is used to screen passengers at Reagan National Airport
in Washington.

 



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