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National News See other National News Articles Title: US Gives Travellers Terrorist Risk Ratings They Cannot Change For 40 Years WASHINGTON - The incoming Senate Judiciary chairman pledged greater scrutiny Friday of computerized government anti-terrorism screening after learning that millions of Americans who travel internationally have been assigned risk assessments over the last four years without their knowledge. Data banks like this are overdue for oversight, said Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., who will take over Judiciary in January. That is going to change in the new Congress. The Associated Press reported Thursday that millions of Americans and foreigners crossing U.S. borders in the past four years have been assessed by the computerized Automated Targeting System, or ATS, designed to help pick out terrorists or criminals. The travelers are not allowed to see or directly challenge these risk assessments, which the government intends to keep on file for 40 years. Under specific circumstances, some or all data in the system can be shared with state, local and foreign governments and even some private contractors. It is simply incredible that the Bush administration is willing to share this sensitive information with foreign governments and even private employers, while refusing to allow U.S. citizens to see or challenge their own terror scores, Leahy said. This system highlights the danger of government use of technology to conduct widespread surveillance of our daily lives without proper safeguards for privacy. Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, chairman of the Senate Homeland Security Committee, said that while it is critical for government to have the tools necessary to thwart terrorists, we must ensure that travelers privacy and civil liberties are appropriately respected. Crucial to the nation's security, Homeland says The Homeland Security Department, which operates ATS, calls the system critical to national security following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. But privacy advocates were alarmed by it. Never before in American history has our government gotten into the business of creating mass risk assessment ratings of its own citizens, said Barry Steinhardt, a lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union. We are stunned the program has been undertaken with virtually no opportunity for the public to evaluate or comment on it. Almost every person entering and leaving the United States by air, sea or land is assessed based on ATS analysis of their travel records and other data, including items such as where they are from, how they paid for tickets, their motor vehicle records, past one-way travel, seating preference and what kind of meal they ordered. The use of the program on travelers was quietly disclosed earlier this month when the department put a notice detailing ATS in the Federal Register, a fine-print compendium of federal rules. The few civil liberties lawyers who had heard of ATS and even some law enforcement officers said they had thought it was only used to screen cargo. The Homeland Security Department called the program one of the most advanced targeting systems in the world and said the nations ability to spot criminals and other security threats would be critically impaired without access to this data. But to David Sobel, a lawyer at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a group devoted to civil liberties in cyberspace: Its probably the most invasive system the government has yet deployed in terms of the number of people affected. Government officials could not say whether ATS has apprehended any terrorists. Based on all the information available to them, federal agents turn back about 45 foreign criminals a day at U.S. borders, according to Homeland Securitys Customs and Border Protection spokesman Bill Anthony. He could not say how many were spotted by ATS. Officials offer vague details Officials described how the system works: applying rules learned from experience with the activities and characteristics of terrorists and criminals to the traveler data. But they would not describe in detail the format in which border agents see the results or in which the databases store the results of the ATS risk assessments. Acting Assistant Homeland Security Secretary Paul Rosenzweig told reporters Friday they could call it scoring. It can be reduced to a number, he said, but he clearly preferred the longer descriptions. Steinhardt said the ATS was more far-reaching than the departments trouble-plagued efforts to develop a computerized screening system for domestic air travelers. That data-mining project now known as Secure Flight caused a furor two years ago in Congress. Lawmakers barred its implementation until it can pass 10 tests for accuracy and privacy protection. In comments to the government about ATS, Sobel said, Some individuals will be denied the right to travel and many the right to travel free of unwarranted interference. Sobel said in the interview that the government notice also raises the possibility that faulty risk assessments could cost innocent people jobs in shipping or travel, government contracts, licenses or other benefits. The government notice says some or all of the ATS data about an individual may be shared with state, local and foreign governments for use in hiring decisions and in granting licenses, security clearances, contracts or other benefits. In some cases, the data may be shared with courts, Congress and even private contractors. Everybody else can see it, but you cant, Stephen Yale-Loehr, an immigration lawyer who teaches at Cornell Law school, said in an interview. Not a 'final decision' about travelers But Jayson P. Ahern, an assistant commissioner of Customs and Border Protection, said the ATS ratings simply allow agents at the border to pick out people not previously identified by law enforcement as potential terrorists or criminals and send them for additional searches and interviews. It does not replace the judgments of officers in reaching a final decision about a traveler, Ahern said in an interview Thursday. This targeting system goes beyond traditional watch lists, Ahern said. Border agents compare arrival names with watch lists separately from the ATS analysis. In a privacy impact assessment posted on its Web site this week, Homeland Security said ATS is aimed at discovering high-risk individuals who may not have been previously associated with a law enforcement action or otherwise be noted as a person of concern to law enforcement. Ahern said ATS does this by applying rules derived from the governments knowledge of terrorists and criminals to the passengers travel records. Ahern declined to disclose any of the rules, but a Homeland Security document on data-mining gave this innocuous example of a risk assessment rule: If an individual sponsors more than one fiancee for immigration at the same time, there is likelihood of immigration fraud. Ahern said ATS was first used to rate the risk posed by travelers in the late 1990s, using personal information about them voluntarily supplied by air and cruise lines. A post-9/11 law vastly expanded the program, he said. It required airline and cruise companies to begin in 2002 sending the government electronic data in advance on all passengers and crew bound into or out of the country. All these names are put through ATS analysis, Ahern said. In addition, at land border crossings, agents enter license plates and the names of vehicle drivers and passengers, and Amtrak voluntarily supplies passenger data on its trains to and from Canada, he said.
Poster Comment: Homeland Security said ATS is aimed at discovering high-risk individuals who may not have been previously associated with a law enforcement action or otherwise be noted as a person of concern to law enforcement. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 4.
#1. To: innieway (#0)
AP version here: http://freedom4um.com/cgi-bin/readart.cgi?ArtNum=40608&Disp Yes, it's the USSR all over again. What do expect when two ex-KGB are working for DHS?
I just found out. When I went to post it, for some reason it didn't give me a duplicate post warning... Don't know what happened... Then as I was scrolling latest comments I found out.
It's not the same source/title, it's good to have them both. And this is a really important story. There are often duplicate even triplicate postings - no matter.
http://www.waynemadsenreport.com/ December 1-3, 2006 -- While the Department of Homeland Security has placed the name of every air passenger traveling into and out of the United States on a secret terrorist rating list based on the mining of various types of personal data and is today hyping a phony "Al Qaeda" cyber attack alert directed at stock and commodities exchanges and other financial houses in the United States, the same department, headed by Michael Chertoff, is ignoring a major breakdown in U.S. national security. On November 27, WMR reported on the case of Israeli Hazki Hen who was arrested for attempting to smuggle as much as $100 million in counterfeit $100 bills from the semi-independent enclave of South Ossetia via middlemen in Georgia and Israel. We can now report that a similar ring connected to the Russian-Israeli Mafia, involving some key participants in the Iran-Contra scandal and illegal U.S. wars in Central America in the 1980s, is traveling into and out of the United States on cleverly forged U.S. passports. While Homeland Security Department under Michael Chertoff hypes secret terrorist rating list and phony cyber-attacks on Wall Street, it permits Russian-Israeli gangsters tied to the same elements who poisoned Alexander Litvinenko to freely travel on forged US passports in and out of the United States. Although the U.S. passport numbers are clearly out of sequence and should be flagged by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials, higher-ups at the Homeland Security Department are looking the other way as unsavory characters transit in and out of the United States on the fake passports. Major destinations for the U.S.-transiting Russian-Israeli Mafia travelers are Mexico, including the troubled states of Oaxaca and Chiapas; Nicaragua; Panama; Venezuela; Guatemala; Honduras; Costa Rica; Colombia; Ecuador; Venezuela; Paraguay; Argentina; Brazil' Chile; and Bolivia. There is clear evidence that the Russian-Israeli criminals are involved in smuggling drugs and weapons and are engaged in money laundering and bank fraud. Favored transit airports for the organized crime mobsters and couriers include Houston's George H. W. International Airport and Miami International Airport.
#5. To: robin (#4)
U.S. and Guyana probe chemical threat to airlines An e-mail sent to newspapers, airlines and the U.S. Embassy in Guyana threatened an attack from an "independent militant group" against U.S. carriers, American Airlines and North American Airlines, as well as Trinidadian carrier BWIA. Inching in on Venezuela...
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