http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/11/02/AR2006110201
810.html

 

U.S. Plans to Screen All Who Enter, Leave Country
Personal Data Will Be Cross-Checked With Terrorism Watch Lists; Risk
Profiles to Be Stored for Years

By Ellen Nakashima and Spencer S. Hsu
Washington Post Staff Writers
Friday, November 3, 2006; A18

The federal government disclosed details yesterday of a border-security
program to screen all people who enter and leave the United States, create a
terrorism risk profile of each individual and retain that information for up
to 40 years.

The details, released in a notice published yesterday in the Federal
Register, open a new window on the government's broad and often
controversial data-collection effort directed at American and foreign
travelers, which was implemented after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

While long known to scrutinize air travelers, the Department of Homeland
Security is seeking to apply new technology to perform similar checks on
people who enter or leave the country "by automobile or on foot," the notice
said.

The department intends to use a program called the Automated Targeting
System, originally designed to screen shipping cargo, to store and analyze
the data.

"We have been doing risk assessments of cargo and passengers coming into and
out of the U.S.," DHS spokesman Jarrod Agen said. "We have the authority and
the ability to do it for passengers coming by land and sea."

In practice, he said, the government has not conducted risk assessments on
travelers at land crossings for logistical reasons.

"We gather, collect information that is needed to protect the borders," Agen
said. "We store the information we see as pertinent to keeping Americans
safe."

Civil libertarians expressed concern that risk profiling on such a scale
would be intrusive and would not adequately protect citizens' privacy
rights, issues similar to those that have surrounded systems profiling air
passengers.

"They are assigning a suspicion level to millions of law-abiding citizens,"
said David Sobel, senior counsel of the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
"This is about as Kafkaesque as you can get."

DHS officials said that by publishing the notice, they are simply providing
"expanded notice and transparency" about an existing program disclosed in
October 2001, the Treasury Enforcement Communications System.

But others said Congress has been unaware of the potential of the Automated
Targeting System to assess non-aviation travelers.

"ATS started as a tool to prevent the entry of drugs with cargo into the
U.S.," said one aide, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the
sensitivity of the subject. "We are not aware of Congress specifically
legislating to make this expansion possible."

The Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, chaired by
Sen. Susan <http://projects.washingtonpost.com/congress/members/c001035/>
Collins (R-Maine), yesterday asked Homeland Security to brief staff members
on the program, Collins's spokeswoman, Jen Burita, said.

The notice comes as the department is tightening its ability to identify
people at the borders. At the end of the year, for example, Homeland
Security is expanding its Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology
program, under which 32 million noncitizens entering the country annually
are fingerprinted and photographed at 115 airports, 15 seaports and 154 land
ports.

Stephen E. Flynn, senior fellow for national security studies at the Council
on Foreign Relations, expressed doubts about the department's ability to
conduct risk assessments of individuals on a wide scale.

He said customs investigators are so focused on finding drugs and weapons of
mass destruction that it would be difficult to screen all individual border
crossers, other than cargo-truck drivers and shipping crews.

"There is an ability in theory for government to cast a wider net," he said.
"The reality of it is customs is barely able to manage the data they have."

The data-mining program stemmed from an effort in the early 1990s by customs
officials to begin assessing the risk of cargo originating in certain
countries and from certain shippers. Risk assessment turned more heavily to
automated, computer-driven systems after the 2001 attacks.

The risk assessment is created by analysts at the National Targeting Center,
a high-tech facility opened in November 2001 and now run by Customs and
Border Protection.

In a round-the-clock operation, targeters match names against terrorist
watch lists and a host of other data to determine whether a person's
background or behavior indicates a terrorist threat, a risk to border
security or the potential for illegal activity. They also assess cargo.

Each traveler assessed by the center is assigned a numeric score: The higher
the score, the higher the risk. A certain number of points send the traveler
back for a full interview.

The Automated Targeting System relies on government databases that include
law enforcement data, shipping manifests, travel itineraries and airline
passenger data, such as names, addresses, credit card details and phone
numbers.

The parent program, Treasury Enforcement Communications System, houses
"every possible type of information from a variety of federal, state and
local sources," according to a 2001 Federal Register notice.

It includes arrest records, physical descriptions and "wanted" notices. The
5.3 billion-record database was accessed 766 million times a day to process
475 million travelers, according to a 2003 Transportation Research Board
study.

In yesterday's Federal Register notice, Homeland Security said it will keep
people's risk profiles for up to 40 years "to cover the potentially active
lifespan of individuals associated with terrorism or other criminal
activities," and because "the risk assessment for individuals who are deemed
low risk will be relevant if their risk profile changes in the future, for
example, if terrorist associations are identified."

DHS will keep a "pointer or reference" to the underlying records that
resulted in the profile.

The DHS notice specified that the Automated Targeting System does not call
for any new means of collecting information but rather for the use of
existing systems. The notice did not spell out what will determine whether
someone is high risk.

But documents and former officials say the system relies on hundreds of
"rules" to factor a score for each individual, vehicle or piece of cargo.

According to yesterday's notice, the program is exempt from certain
requirements of the Privacy Act of 1974 that allow, for instance, people to
access records to determine "if the system contains a record pertaining to a
particular individual" and "for the purpose of contesting the content of the
record."

 



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