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Resistance
See other Resistance Articles

Title: Multistate Anti-Terrorism Information Exchange [aka MATRIX]
Source: en.wikipedia.org
URL Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multis ... Terrorism_Information_Exchange
Published: Dec 12, 2012
Author: Wikipedia and various sources
Post Date: 2013-02-01 12:39:36 by GreyLmist
Keywords: MATRIX, Hank Asher, TIA, NICS
Views: 183
Comments: 6

The Multistate Anti-Terrorism Information Exchange Program, also known by the acronym MATRIX, was a U.S. federally funded data mining system originally developed for the Florida Department of Law Enforcement described as a tool to identify terrorist subjects.

The system was reported to analyze government and commercial databases to find associations between suspects or to discover locations of or completely new "suspects". The database and technologies used in the system were housed by Seisint, a Florida-based company since acquired by Lexis Nexis.

The Matrix program was shut down in June 2005 after federal funding was cut in the wake of public concerns over privacy and state surveillance.[1]

History

Matrix was the brainchild of Hank Asher, a serial businessman in the data aggregation field. Asher reportedly contacted Florida police immediately after the September 11 terrorist attacks, claiming he could find the hijackers as well as other potential terrorists.[2] Asher reportedly offered to make available the database and technology that could do the job quickly, for free, supplied by the company he owned and operated: Seisint.

Control of the system was handed over to law enforcement officials, although Seisint continued to house and operate it on their behalf. After a demonstration of the system at the White House in January 2003 Matrix received US$4 million in grants from the U.S. Justice Department and the program was earmarked US$8 million by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.[3]

The program snowballed, as states signed up to participate, including Alabama, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Ohio and Utah. California and Texas joined then exited the program, citing privacy and security concerns. The U.S. federal government and the CIA was cited as likely future users.

The program's similarity to the Total Information Awareness (TIA) federally funded initiative that was terminated following public concerns contributed to Matrix's demise. Matrix came under scrutiny by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) which made Freedom of Information Act requests in Florida, where the program originated, and to the federal government on 30 October 2003.[4] The ACLU followed this up with simultaneous information requests in Connecticut, Michigan, New York, Ohio and Pennsylvania for information about those states' participation in Matrix.[5]

The ACLU's requests sought to find out the information sources that Matrix was drawing upon, who had access to the database and how it is being used. As well as the funding and operations described here, the ACLU's requests revealed that Matrix would perform an almost identical function to the banned TIA. Matrix would bind together government and commercial databases to allow federal and state law enforcement entities to conduct detailed searches on individuals.

Public revelation of the projects funding caused an uproar in the media and states began withdrawing their support. The Matrix program was finally shut down in June 2005 after federal funding was cut in the wake of public concerns over privacy and state surveillance.

Seisint retained the technology used to operate Matrix. Both Seisint and its Matrix technology are now owned by Lexis Nexis.

Function

The Matrix website stated that the data would include criminal histories, driver's license data, vehicle registration records, and public data record entries. Other data was thought to include credit histories, driver's license photographs, marriage and divorce records, social security numbers, dates of birth, and the names and addresses of family members, neighbors and business associates. All of this information is available to the government without the need for a warrant. The ACLU pointed out that the type of data that the Matrix compiles could be expanded to include information in commercial databases encompasses such as purchasing habits, magazine subscriptions, income and job histories.

Matrix would combine these government records and information from commercial databases in a data warehouse. Dossiers would be reviewed by specialized software to identify anomalies using 'mathematical analysis.' When anomalies are spotted, they would be scrutinized by personnel who would search for evidence of terrorism or other crimes.[6]

Like the TIA, Matrix would use data mining where searches for patterns in this data (including the 'anomalies') would be used to identify individuals possibly involved in terrorist or other criminal activity. Congressional critic Paula B. Dockery pointed out that like the TIA, this kind of 'data mining' may be ineffective, and have severe downsides, including its privacy costs.

Data from Matrix would be transferred through the Regional Information Sharing Systems network, an existing secure law enforcement network used to transmit sensitive information among law enforcement agencies. The network was linked to High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas, United States Attorneys' Offices, other federal agencies and several state law enforcement systems.[7][8]

============

References listed at the site re: Hank Asher, implicated in drug smuggling

When maverick cyber-pioneer Hank Asher invented MATRIX, Vanity Fair
050131: "When maverick cyber-pioneer Hank Asher invented MATRIX—a controversial personal-information database—he gave the government a powerful tool for tracking terrorists. So why isn't he a hero?."
http://www.vanityfair.com/commentary/content/articles/050131roco01

Florida hires firm founded by man implicated in drug-smuggling to fight terror,
CNews.canoe.ca: "Hank Asher is founder of Seisint, Inc., an information-technology company with a $1.6-million contract with the Florida Department of Law Enforcement to work on a pilot program for the Matrix network, through which sensitive information on terrorism and other crime suspects would be exchanged."
http://cnews.canoe.ca/CNEWS/WarOnTerrorism/2003/08/02/152364-ap.html

State contracts with company founded by man linked to smuggling (cache file),
AP, 3 August 2003.
http://216.109.117.135/search/cache?va=%22Multistate+Anti-Terrorism+Information+Exchange%22+&ei=UTF-8&n=20&fl=0&url=Wsx3A5IX2aIJ:www.naplesnews.com/03/08/florida/d923085a.htm

Man Implicated As Ex-Smuggler Quits Job, AP, 29 August 2003.
http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/mld/ledgerenquirer/news/breaking_news/6653117.htm

Thomas C. Greene, A back door to Poindexter's Orwellian dream, TheRegister,
24 September 2003: "The company profiting from this data bonanza, Florida outfit Seisint Inc., is run by a gentleman implicated two decades ago in a drug smuggling ring, according to the Associated Press. This certainly qualifies him as an appropriate understudy to Poindexter."
http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/55/33006.html

Matrix Database May Substitute For Total Information Awareness Project,
FuturePundit.com, 14 August 2003: "The database is being developed by a company called Seisint which already markets a commercial database service called Accurint which is a database service for locating people and past and present addresses."
http://www.futurepundit.com/archives/001573.html

Ashlee Vance, "Georgia runs from the MATRIX", Register/UK,
22 October 2003: "The state of Georgia has pulled out of the U.S. Department of Justice sponsored MATRIX information collection program, leaving data only on its felons and sexual offenders behind in the Orwellian database. ... The list of states willing to participate in the MATRIX project is dwindling. Kentucky, Oregon and South Carolina pulled out earlier this year. Georgia's exit leaves the Party with Alabama, Connecticut, Florida, Michigan, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Utah as guinea pigs. ... The handy life-tracking database idea should sound familiar. DARPA tried to get some backing for its Total Information Awareness (TIA) program before being shut down by Congress. It seems, however, that was bit a mini-bump in the road. Along with TIA and MATRIX, we have NIMD (Novel Intelligence from Massive Data); CAPPS (Computer Assisted Passenger Pre-Screening System); HID (Human Identification at a Distance), [and] ARM (Activity Recognition Monitoring)."
http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/55/33540.html


Poster Comment:

This info is posted as a flashback reminder regarding the issue of background checks as Congress deliberates expansively about Medical records as a 2nd Amendment Prohibition.

FBI — Gun Checks/NICS
www.fbi.gov/about-us/cjis/nics
The National Instant Criminal Background Check System, or NICS, is all about saving lives and protecting people from harm—by not letting guns and explosives ...

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 6.

#4. To: All (#0)

Updates re: Hank Asher, implicated in drug smuggling; aka "the Father/Godfather of data fusion" (the MATRIX and Fusion Centers too?)

Link correction on a vanityfair.com reference re: Hank Asher listed in the opening post at the MATRIX Wikipedia site:

http://www.vanityfair.com/commentary/content/articles/050131roco0 1

The Net’s Master Data-miner: When maverick cyber-pioneer Hank Asher invented MATRIX—a controversial personal-information database—he gave the government a powerful tool for tracking terrorists. So why isn’t he a hero?

Hank Asher reportedly died January 10 or 11, 2013. No official cause of death that I can find yet. Said unofficially at this site to have died of a heart attack:

Bradshaws cocaine smuggling pal Hank Asher is dead: Wasn´t [affiliate John] Walsh a hotel concierge in Miami the same time Hank was smuggling? [sic] I was woke up in the middle of the night to fly over to chub cay and pick up one of [Asher's] fishing boats and bring it back to the US. I was probably carrying back a load of powder and didn´t even know it! Believe me all you people who think he was a saint for helping people don´t really know him

Other references:

ACA International Obituary: Hank Asher - acainternational.org excerpts

Hank Asher, founder of ACA International affiliate member TLO in Boca Raton, Fla., passed away on Jan. 10, 2013, at the age of 61.

Known as the “father of data fusion,”

According to his company website, Asher founded three companies: Database Technologies, Seisint and TLO.

TLO's Hank Asher: A one of a kind technology pioneer, dead at 61 – slideshow; bizjournals.com excerpts

Asher had launched his third database company, TLO, about three years ago after selling Seisint to LexisNexis for $775 million in 2004 and selling Database Technologies for $147 million in 1999.

TLO stood for "the last one," since he vowed not to go through that type of all- consuming entrepreneurial effort again.

Reed Elsevier, which owned Seisint, in 2009 sued Asher, alleging he breached a non-compete agreement by starting TLO.

The suit was dismissed later in 2009.

so far all I've heard is he died peacefully at home. The Palm Beach County Medical Examiner's office confirmed to me that it had examined his body, but the results are pending.

Earlier in his life, Asher was on the other side of the law. by his own admission, he had a brief stint smuggling cocaine in 1982. He was never prosecuted and later helped the DEA.

In a 2010 interview, Asher said his first company was Asher Painting in Fort Lauderdale when he was 18. In Indiana, he painted all sorts of metal industrial structures. A company he founded in 1984 was called Pirates Choice Caribbean Rum and Spirits Corp.

Talk:Hank Asher - sourcewatch.org

once smuggled millions of dollars worth of cocaine.

Asher avoided detection and was never charged with a crime during what he calls "the hazy period" of his life. The statute of limitations has long since elapsed on drug-running activities he admits spanned eight months in 1981 and 1982.

FDLE files say informants identified Asher as a person who provided police protection for smuggling operations in the Bahamas. Asher was listed as a witness in drug trials from Gainesville to Chicago, and once was represented by famed attorney F. Lee Bailey. Documents filed by prosecutors in Chicago said Asher was a pilot and former smuggler who lived [in the Bahamas] on Great Harbour near Cistern Cay, a small island airport once used by smugglers.

Federal, state and local agencies interested in AutoTrack researched Asher's background and came up with a 1987 Chicago Tribune story. The article, citing court records in a drug case, quoted Bailey as saying he was working with a pilot and former drug smuggler named Hank Asher to reduce trafficking in the Bahamas.

famed criminal defense attorney F. Lee Bailey, who also owned a home on Great Harbour Cay, approached Asher. Bailey told FDLE investigators that he and Asher had concocted a plan that had Asher misleading traffickers into believing their arrests were imminent and Bailey negotiating plea deals that took the smugglers out of the business.

"We looked into" the allegations, John Walsh [host of the TV show America's Most Wanted] said.

in 1999, amid more media reports of the smuggling stories, the FBI and Drug Enforcement Agency dropped their AutoTrack contracts.

Asher's first company, DBT Online, Inc., bought him out for $147 million in 1999 after the FBI and the Drug Enforcement Administration suspended its contracts over Asher's past and concerns that the company could potentially monitor targets of investigations.

After severing ties with DBT Online, Asher created other companies and grew even closer to law enforcement officials. In 1999, he merged two companies into Seisint Inc. The new company supplies Accurint, a database that provides detailed information on individuals. Seisint also supplies specialized information to law enforcement agencies around the country. "FDLE began doing business with Asher's first company in 1993. It is clear from 1993 records that FDLE officials knew they were dealing with a drug smuggler. Some officers questioned whether Asher's company could be trusted. No additional background check was conducted in 2001, when the relationship grew closer.

[Former New York City Mayor Rudy] Giuliani, now an international crime consultant, uses Asher in the hunt for terrorists. [He said:] "People do a lot of things in life. It's a question of what you can do to make up for it"

Hank Asher - Orange County; several articles at ocweekly.com related to Hank Asher

Mike Carona's Curse: Two of the Dirty Ex-OC Sheriff's Tainted Benefactors Die Within Weeks At The Age Of 61 -- Excerpts

A former Florida cocaine trafficker [Hank Asher], who became an ultra-wealthy database guru that bought valuable gifts for corrupt Orange County sheriff-turned-convicted-felon Mike Carona, died Thursday or Friday, according to news reports.

[Carona] served on a top-secret George W. Bush national security task force

Carona didn't know that his statements were secretly recorded by Don Haidl, a Rancho Cucamonga used car salesman, who illegally gave Carona more than $200,000 in 1998 to defeat Santa Ana Police Chief Paul Walters for the county's top cop job.

Ironically, like Asher, Haidl [sic] died at the age of 61 in December.

two sources told me that Asher also paid for the dirty sheriff's massive legal defense team. Confronted with the allegation, one the lawyers smiled, paused and said he couldn't speak on the record about the topic.

Though he used his public office for corruption, Carona remains the recipient of a lucrative-taxpayer funded pension that deposits into his bank account more than $21,000 a month--even while he's in prison and for the rest of his life.

GreyLmist  posted on  2013-02-21   21:04:22 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: All (#4) (Edited)

TLO's Hank Asher: A one of a kind technology pioneer, dead at 61 – slideshow; bizjournals.com excerpts

Asher had launched his third database company, TLO, about three years ago after selling Seisint to LexisNexis for $775 million in 2004 and selling Database Technologies for $147 million in 1999.

[sic]

Reed Elsevier, which owned Seisint, in 2009 sued Asher, alleging he breached a non-compete agreement by starting TLO.

The suit was dismissed later in 2009.

Talk:Hank Asher - sourcewatch.org

once smuggled millions of dollars worth of cocaine.

Asher avoided detection and was never charged with a crime during what he calls "the hazy period" of his life. The statute of limitations has long since elapsed on drug-running activities he admits spanned eight months in 1981 and 1982.

Asher - Wikipedia

The Real Matrix: Selling Information to Highest Bidder

Reed Elsevier, besides spying on millions of Americans, owns Lexis- Nexis database.

Guardian, July 15 [2004]:

Reed Elsevier moved to capitalise on growing demand for security information on both sides of the Atlantic yesterday with the $745m acquisition of database specialist Seisint.

The Florida company's main product, Accurint, provides online access and analysis of public records for government and legal clients. It also provides addresses and phone numbers across the world for logistics firm UPS.

Last year it emerged that privately owned Seisint was working with a dozen US states to produce a system called Matrix designed to scan publicly available information, cross-reference that data with state driving records and police files and produce a list of terrorist suspects.

This new application came under fire from civil liberties groups. Its dealings with the state of Florida also came under scrutiny last year when the St Petersburg Times reported that in 1987 Hank Asher, who went on to found Seisint, was granted immunity from prosecution after being named an unindicted conspirator in a drug smuggling case involving cocaine valued at $150 million.

He resigned from the board of the company in August as "part of a management transition plan". A spokeswoman for Reed said yesterday the company knew about his past. "He has had nothing to do with the company for some time." ...

Reed Elsevier reckons the global risk management sector was worth upwards of $5bn last year and has recorded annual growth of 7-9% over the past 10 years.

The Anglo-Dutch publisher plans to integrate Seisint into its LexisNexis information unit, which has a risk management arm, as it seeks to broaden its areas of expertise.

LexisNexis chief executive Andrew Prozes said: "Seisint is a strongly growing business and will significantly enhance LexisNexis's ability to offer the most powerful, fastest, easiest to use solutions in the rapidly growing risk management sector. The acquisition will accelerate LexisNexis's future revenue and profit growth."

One of the bedrocks of Reed's business is likely to come under fire from a committee of MPs this month. It is the world's largest publisher of scientific journals, a market that the science and technology select committee has been investigating for several months.

Next week the committee will publish its report which is widely expected to be critical of some of the practices of the big publishers including the way they sell journals to universities by "bundling" several titles together and tying institutions into long-term contracts.

The Best Democracy Money Can Buy: Part III A Black-List Burning for Bush: The Unreported Story of How They Fixed the Vote in Florida

I was curious about this company [ChoicePoint] that chose the president for America’s voters.

They had quite a pedigree for this solemn task. The company’s Florida subsidiary, Database Technologies (now DBT Online), was founded by one Hank Asher. When U.S. law enforcement agencies alleged that he might have been associated with Bahamian drug dealers -- although no charges were brought -- the company lost its data management contract with the FBI. Hank and his friends left and so, in Florida’s eyes, the past is forgiven.

ChoicePoint - Wikipedia

ChoicePoint became embroiled in the Florida voter file controversy of 2000 through its acquisition of Database Technologies (founded by Hank Asher and now known as DBT Online Inc.), a data analysis company in the same year. During the U.S. presidential election of 2000, people in Florida were struck from central voter file and not permitted to vote. The US Presidential election hinged on the outcome of the vote in Florida.

DBT Online had been contracted to provide a list of voters barred from voting by the state of Florida in 1998 for US$4 million, including a first year fee of US$2,317,800. The 1998 contracting process involved no bidding[citation needed].

ChoicePoint Inc. - answers.com

Spun off from Equifax Inc. in 1997, ChoicePoint Inc. serves the insurance industry, government, and businesses through a variety of information services it provides. After numerous acquisitions during its short history, the company has streamlined itself around the core areas of data collection and information brokering. Background checks, motor vehicle reports, property inspections, and drug screening are just a few of the services ChoicePoint provides to many of the nation's leading businesses.

The ChoicePoint story begins with credit report giant Equifax Inc., based in Atlanta, Georgia. [sic] Equifax, which stood for "equitability in the gathering and presentation of facts," grew exponentially in the remaining years of the 1970s and into the 1980s. By the late 1980s Equifax ruled the information- compilation industry, but was not without its detractors.

Merger talks fell through with Kroll but Equifax bought Advanced HR Solutions Inc. in June and spun off ChoicePoint on July 31, 1997. [Acquired] Medical Information Network, LLC in October and Drug Free, Inc. in November 1997. ChoicePoint had also inherited the Equifax/CDB Infotek imbroglio. CDB had been accused of violating privacy protection rights in early 1997 for allegedly selling voter registration lists to bill collectors

Equifax washed its hands of it all by spinning CDB off with ChoicePoint. In early 1998 ChoicePoint bought the remaining 30 percent interest of CDB and announced that it would "review" CDB's information selling practices.

Not long after buying the remainder of CDB, ChoicePoint merged Attest National Drug Testing Inc. into its medical services unit and also bought Application Profiles Inc., Informus Corp., Customer Development Corp., Tyler-McLennon Inc., EquiSearch Services Inc., and DATEQ Information Network Inc.

ChoicePoint continued its flurry of acquisitions in 1999, buying six companies and landing several lucrative contracts as well. [sic] ChoicePoint's other division, the Insurance Services group, topped competitors as the leading underwriter and information products provider to property and casualty companies nationwide, with the second largest insurance testing facility in the industry. The Insurance unit also had won lucrative contracts with Progressive Insurance, Kemper, and CNA.

In 2000 ChoicePoint celebrated the new year by initiating another buying spree. Within the next several months ChoicePoint bought seven companies and then merged with Florida-based competitor DBT (Database Technologies) Online Inc. DBT specialized in court-related documents and the two companies merged operations (under the ChoicePoint banner) for a stock swap said to be worth $440 million. Yet, as with the CDB purchase, ChoicePoint was once again embroiled in controversy. This one stemmed from DBT's $4 million contract with the state of Florida. Hired in 1998 to clean up Florida's voter registration lists after a fraudulent 1997 mayoral election, DBT was supposed to "purge" the lists of deceased citizens, duplicates, and convicted felons. DBT ended up purging more than 170,000 of the state's 8.6 million voters in error, and ChoicePoint was caught in the crossfire as DBT's owner.

In 2001 ChoicePoint acquired seven more firms, including the well-known Pinkerton's Inc. Pinkerton's was widely regarded as the country's first investigative agency, founded in 1849 by Allan Pinkerton to chase counterfeiters. It seemed a bit ironic for Pinkerton's--a forebear of Equifax, ChoicePoint, and the entire data collection and sleuthing industry--to come into the ChoicePoint fold.

In 2002 ChoicePoint continued to augment its business units with more acquisitions (six),

Early in 2003 ChoicePoint bought two more companies, which brought the total of acquisitions since its incorporation as an independent company to 38. The firm then sold off CP Commercial Specialists, a property inspection service, to focus on its core businesses of data collection and informational services. In six years the company had transformed itself from an Equifax subsidiary to one of the most powerful and increasingly successful information brokers in the world.

some civil libertarians argued with this assessment and likened ChoicePoint's methods to Big Brotherish tactics

Edited for highlighting and for sequencing of a Wikipedia link + to add the answers.com link and excerpts in the last section.

GreyLmist  posted on  2013-02-21   23:38:34 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: All (#5)

Hank Asher, drug smuggling contemporary of Barry Seal:

Cross-referencing Post #191 at 4um Title: Former pilot and 9/11 conspiracy theorist shoots and kills 2 teen children, then himself

GreyLmist  posted on  2013-02-22   3:28:54 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 6.

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