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Posts Tagged ‘homeland security’

Clergy Recruited “In Case of” Martial Law

Posted by kandylini on July 17, 2008

Ingenious plan calls for using the opiate of the masses to control useless eaters during martial law.

The following video is a compilation of the KSLA News segment and Congressmen Peter DeFazio railing against Homeland Security.

By Jeff Ferrell, KSLA News via Alex Jones’ Prison Planet.

Could martial law ever become a reality in America? Some fear any nuclear, biological or chemical attack on U.S. soil might trigger just that. KSLA News 12 has discovered that the clergy would help the government with potentially their biggest problem: Us.

Charleton Heston’s now-famous speech before the National Rifle Association at a convention back in 2000 will forever be remembered as a stirring moment for all 2nd Amendment advocates. At the end of his remarks, Heston held up his antique rifle and told the crowd in his Moses-like voice, “over my cold, dead hands.”

While Heston, then serving as the NRA President, made those remarks in response to calls for more gun control laws at the time, those words live on. Heston’s declaration captured a truly American value: An over-arching desire to protect our freedoms.

But gun confiscation is exactly what happened during the state of emergency following Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, along with forced relocation. U.S. Troops also arrived, something far easier to do now, thanks to last year’s elimination of the 1878 Posse Comitatus act, which had forbid regular U.S. Army troops from policing on American soil.

If martial law were enacted here at home, like depicted in the movie “The Siege”, easing public fears and quelling dissent would be critical. And that’s exactly what the ‘Clergy Response Team’ helped accomplish in the wake of Katrina.

Dr. Durell Tuberville serves as chaplain for the Shreveport Fire Department and the Caddo Sheriff’s Office. Tuberville said of the clergy team’s mission, “the primary thing that we say to anybody is, ‘let’s cooperate and get this thing over with and then we’ll settle the differences once the crisis is over.’”

Such clergy response teams would walk a tight-rope during martial law between the demands of the government on the one side, versus the wishes of the public on the other. “In a lot of cases, these clergy would already be known in the neighborhoods in which they’re helping to diffuse that situation,” assured Sandy Davis. He serves as the director of the Caddo-Bossier Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness.

For the clergy team, one of the biggest tools that they will have in helping calm the public down or to obey the law is the bible itself, specifically Romans 13. Dr. Tuberville elaborated, “because the government’s established by the Lord, you know. And, that’s what we believe in the Christian faith. That’s what’s stated in the scripture.”

Civil rights advocates believe the amount of public cooperation during such a time of unrest may ultimately depend on how long they expect a suspension of rights might last.

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Where Is FEMA?

Posted by kandylini on June 13, 2008

Source: Jim Kirwan, Rense.com.

The US Department of Homeland Security has an annual budget of $40 billion. Out of that money FEMA gets about one billion annually. FEMA was created to combine all federal services into one giant agency that was to “manage” ALL national emergencies that happen within the United States. Yet since this mega-agency was created, by combining 22 major government agencies into a single behemoth; the people of this nation have not received real help during any local or national emergency, since the fraudulent creation of the Federal Emergency Mismanagement Agency.

The country is under siege by natural disasters at the moment: From the fires in California to the floods in Iowa and beyond. Freak tornados and record temperatures combine in many places while droughts alternate with floods throughout the nation: And the two things missing in the coverage by the media are any questions about the nation’s total non-response and the lack of National Guard Troops anywhere: Now, when their help is truly needed!

Our taxes paid for State National Guard troops but our Owners sent them to Iraq and Afghanistan to fight in failed political wars for private corporate profits. Just this week $23 Billion of the money appropriated for Iraq has been found in the coffers of some of the largest military contractors in the US. It’s a massive story of waste and abuse, and criminal war-profiteering, but the government scrubbed the video, almost immediately upon its release. That’s what happens in America whenever the owners are uncomfortable; they just kill the story and wait for the pubic to forget about it. (1)

In the current series of disasters; there are no troops here to help with evacuations, and the only help that FEMA is currently offering to victims of the Iowa flooding is: “save all your receipts, because you’ll need to prove what it cost you if you want any help after this is over.” Whatever happened to the Red Cross ­ they never did much, but at least they put in a token appearance, pre-Bush & His Bandits!

Why was the National Weather Service not on top of this and working hand-in-glove with FEMA to provide pre-positioned food and water, for the victims; as well as assisting with evacuations for the tens of thousands now homeless! Doesn’t ‘Emergency management’ mean having the national ability to plan ahead? That was how the Bushwhackers sold this fraudulent concoction to the public when Bush demanded this radical overhaul of the nation’s emergency services. He got his white-elephant but all we got was his militarization of our local police, by private no-bid government contracts (Blackwater & others) combined with the complete absence of the State National Guard units and their very necessary heavy equipment.

FEMA has done nothing but FAIL since it appeared as the largest government agency in history: yet no one in congress is demanding investigations for those that keep on failing. Apparently whatever FEMA does is just fine with congress, as they have never charged anyone for what was and is still being done to the victims of either Andrew, Katrina or any of their other failures, like the fires in Arizona and New Mexico.

FEMA has not tried to assist with either homes or jobs since those storms hit the gulf coast; in fact in New Orleans FEMA was instrumental in destroying 5,000 perfectly good homes, untouched by the floods ­ homes that needed to be destroyed to make way for new housing on land that was deemed to be “too valuable “to house those that were living there” That was FEMA in action then! Where is FEMA now ­ and why has the so-called media not demanded more from this fraudulent government Agency!

Why is the stock market still going up? The country is falling apart and prices haven’t begun to see the top of this nightmare, and yet our money is falling as fast as the price of oil is climbing ­ so why does the market keep on climbing! Some say it’s an oil shortage, but that’s a lie! The United States back in the 50′s found (and sealed) enough oil and gas to fulfill all our needs for at least the next two hundred years ­ it’s SECRET and it’s still in Alaska. (2)

The markets go up because the investor class is getting rich, hell they’ve never had it so good, while the rest of us get crumbs and ashes and are told that “times are tough but our economy is sound.” The rest of the planet knows the truth and they’re making damn sure their governments know they’re angry: so what’s wrong with us? Are we just like stray dogs; not entitled to share in what we have continued to pay for? The Europeans and others are standing up for what they see as ‘highway robbery.” So what’s the matter with us! (3)

The U.S. treasury,supposedly “our” treasury that this government managed to completely empty in the first seven years of perpetual war; was not supposed to have been created to serve only the corporate bankers, but since 1913 that’s exactly who the Federal Reserve is serving, first, last, and always! Here’s the history that no one in authority wants any American to know or understand. (4)

So while you watch the fabulous footage of all the disasters, and listen to the tales of lost possessions and needless deaths ­ remember that your ‘government’ created the Federal Emergency Mismanagement Agency, not to take care of people, but to insure that ordinary people would have no where to turn when disasters of any kind upend our lives! Not true you say?

Silence in the face of adversity is consent ­ and Americans have lost their ability to speak whenever this government acts ­just like we failed to call Nancy Pelosi on her criminal act, when she announced that “Impeachment was off the table.” Since we did not object to that, in her latest bit of treason against us all she decided to block the bill in congress that would have forced Bush to ask congress for a vote before bombing Iran.

Pelosi did this out of her undying loyalty to the American Israeli Political Action Committee; having placed Israel over and above the national interests of the American people and the lives and deaths of American troops for which she, as Speaker of the House of Representatives, is responsible. (5)

Pelosi is also third in line for the presidency, and this is how she treats her constituents and her sacred oath of office! Pelosi belongs in front of the War Crimes Tribunal, and the firing squad that will follow as one of the key members of those that will face prosecution for a whole range of war crimes and crimes against humanity. If there was a congress she would have been censored, for interfering in the Impeachment process-but instead she was elected as “Speaker of the House.” Tells you about all you need to know about your congress, doesn’t it!

Maybe, all things considered, we don’t deserve to have a functioning Emergency Management Agency, because from the facts in play above and below, it appears that we do not care about what happens to us ­ because we have placed our lives in the hands of these criminals without questioning anything they continue to do to those of us that pay them!

kirwanstudios@sbcglobal.net

1) BBC Uncovers Lost Iraq Billions http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7444083.stm

2) The Energy Non-crisis
http://www.thepeoplesvoice.org/cgi-bin/blogs/videos.php/2008/05/30/ the_energy_non_crisis

3) Factories close, Supermarkets empty, as jets run out of fuel a trucker’s strike bites http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2008/jun/12/oil.spain

4) The USA vs. US

http://www.usavsus.info/

5) Nancy Pelosi Pulled Iran Bill on Request of Israel http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article20081.htm

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Surprise! No signs of Al Qaeda™ at U.S.-Mexican border: official

Posted by kandylini on April 14, 2008

By Randall Mikkelsen, Reuters. Comments from Signs of the Times:

Authorities have seen no signs of al Qaeda trying to insert operatives into the United States from Mexico, but the militant group has considered doing so, a U.S. intelligence official said on Friday.

Comment: Interesting how intelligence officials know even what is in the mind of the “al Qaeda” masterminds – yet they are unable to find them.

The comments by Charles Allen, Homeland Security undersecretary for intelligence and analysis, could undercut one argument by advocates in and out of government for get-tough tactics to fight illegal crossings at the southern U.S. border — that they are needed to fight terrorism.

Comment: As usual, the excuse of terrorism serves the purpose of justifying measures which are completely unrelated.

In contrast, at least one Islamist militant has been caught trying to enter the United States from Canada by land to attempt an attack.

“We know of no trained al Qaeda operatives who have crossed over our southern border,” Allen told reporters.

“We do know that going back to 2004, the southern border is something that al Qaeda’s central leadership has looked at. But we know of no specifics of where al Qaeda has really endeavored to cross our borders in the south,” he said.

The U.S. government is seeking to complete this year a planned 670-mile border fence to fight illegal crossings from Mexico.

Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff has cited the anti-terrorism argument in waiving environmental laws and other legal restrictions to quickly build the fence.

“The flow of illegal traffic through the border region imperils our ability to fight terrorism by stopping the illegal entry of terrorists,” the Homeland Security department said earlier this month in justifying the latest waivers, for 500 miles of potential fencing.

Allen said there have been militant “sympathizers and fund-raisers for Hizbollah” trying to cross from the south, but no trained operatives have been discovered.

SUFFICIENT THREATS

A Homeland Security Department official said those crossings, and the potential for operatives to cross, are sufficient threats to help justify the fence construction’s urgency.

On the other hand, Vancouver-based militant Ahmeed Ressam, with suspected links to al Qaeda, was stopped with explosives in his car at the U.S. border with Canada in December 1999, foiling a suspected plot to bomb Los Angeles.

Comment: That makes it one (failed) case of smuggling explosives across the border in almost a decade.

The United States was working closely with Canadian authorities, Allen said, and he credited them with breaking up in 2006 a plot by militants to carry out an “al Qaeda-inspired” bombing campaign in the Toronto area.

Allen also said al Qaeda is trying to recruit both white and nonwhite people so it can train “western-looking” operatives to help it carry out attacks in Europe and the United States.

Comment: Therefore we are all automatically suspects – for the simple fact that we all look either white or nonwhite.

No such suspects have yet been caught trying to enter the United States, but the effort remains a concern. “This is something to which we must pay a lot of attention,” Allen said.

He said al Qaeda shifted its strategy to seek Western-appearing recruits after the December 2005 death of al Qaeda external operations chief Abu Hamza Rabia. Rabia recruited operatives who had little experience with the West, he said.

(Editing by Sandra Maler and Bill Trott)

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Homeland Ministry Plans Raytheon “Ray Guns” at Airports

Posted by kandylini on April 6, 2008

Kurt Nimmo
Truth News
April 4, 2008

The DHS, affectionately called the “Ministry” here because it resembles something out of Orwell’s famous novel, wants to fit airports with ray guns. I kid you not. “The US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) will consider fitting high-power microwave electropulse rayguns at US airports, in order to defend against the threat of terrorists firing portable anti-aircraft missiles at airliners,” reports Lewis Page for The Register. “American defense heavyweight Raytheon would partner with Israel’s Rafael and Kongsberg of Norway to provide the technology, according to a report in Flight International. The proposed kit is known as ‘Vigilant Eagle’, and is competing for DHS securo-dollars with defensive systems that could be fitted to the airliners themselves — for instance BAE Systems’ JetEye.”

Okay, tell me this does not sound like another “defense industry” scam, yet another scheme to make billions of dollars. Sure, there is the possibility somebody with a rocket launcher may take out an airliner. But if al-Qaeda hates our freedom, why haven’t’ they done this already? Is al-Qaeda conducting a war against the Great Satan, one with battles strung over decades? At this rate, it will take a thousand years to install the Great Caliph/Khalifah.

In fact, since 9/11, there has not been one single solitary attack against the Great Satan. Some will proudly state this is because of our vigilance and determination. It’s because Congress passed the Patriot Act and other Constitution bashing legislation and no shortage of presidential directives. Occasionally we get treated to a shoddily rigged case, such as the street kids in Miami who colluded with al-Qaeda — that is, an FBI informant — or the kids in Canada who had the government deliver a truckload of fertilizer, passing it off as a dangerous explosive. And then there was the patently absurd airliner liquid fiasco, when we were told miscreants would mix up explosives in the bathroom of an aloft airliner. However, my favorite is the Fort Dix pizza killers, Muslims who were going to deliver death instead of hands-tossed pies.

Now we’re going to get missile batteries at the airport. “Vigilant Eagle, unlike its rivals, would be sited at the airport. Light, portable anti-aircraft missiles of the type used by terrorists/insurgents lack the ability to hit a jet at cruising altitude, so such attacks would need to be mounted close to takeoff or landing,” Page continues. “Vigilant Eagle would detect any missiles fired using a network of infrared cameras to pick out the hot rocket exhaust plume. The system would then focus an intense microwave beam on the flying weapon, generated by a so-called Active Electronically Scanned Array (AESA) of the type used in the latest fighter radars.”

Man, what a deal for Raytheon. How many airports in this country? Do the math. Cha-cha-ching!

In fact, to simply roll this system out and test it for the Ministry, Raytheon wants a cool $10 million. It used to be a company built something, tested it, and showed it off to a prospective customer in anticipation of selling it. But that was before the “defense industry” (defense against illusory enemies and manufactured Goldsteins) captured a big chunk of the government, something Eisenhower warned about as he left office.

Get ready for airports to resemble firebases. Of course, this wonderful technology you are going seriously in debt to pay for will never be used because there are no terrorists with rocket launchers sitting at the end of runways. Maybe a demented pizza guy waving a Koran but not a Muji with a Stinger. Naturally, in a few years, Raytheon will come up with Vigilant Eagle II and we’ll have to pay millions to see how it works and billions to have it installed.

It’s a sweetheart deal for the death merchants. But then that’s why the Ministry was created in the first place — to allow death merchants and “security” corporations to eat at the public trough.

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REAL ID vs the States

Posted by kandylini on April 3, 2008

http://www.news.com/FAQ-How-will-Real-ID-affect-you/2009-1028_3-6229517.html

FAQ: How will Real ID affect you?

By Declan McCullagh
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
February 7, 2008 4:00 AM PST

Editor’s note: A May deadline looms as just one flash point in a political showdown between Homeland Security and states that oppose Real ID demands. This is the last in a four-part series examining the confrontation. Today’s installment is a set of frequently asked questions, or FAQ, that we hope explains how the Real ID law affects you.

 

The Real ID law is touted by Homeland Security officials as an anticrime and antiterror measure, but is steadfastly opposed by some state governments on privacy and sovereignty grounds. Computer scientists also have raised concerns about how its creation of a national interlinked database would work in practice. Keep reading for more on Real ID.

Q: When does the Real ID Act take effect?
On May 11, a little more than three months from now. But states like California that have agreed to comply and ones like Pennsylvania that have requested a deadline extension are not affected–driver’s licenses from those states will continue to work for entering federal buildings and flying commercially.

Some states seem to have requested an extension as a tactical maneuver with little intention of ever complying. Washington and Idaho may fall into this category. A spokesman for Idaho Gov. C.L. “Butch” Otter told us: “We’ve asked for an extension, but we still have serious concerns and reservations about it and its future here is to be determined.”

Q: Who’s going to have trouble flying or entering federal buildings starting May 11?
Residents of the five states–Maine, South Carolina, Montana, Oklahoma, and New Hampshire–that have firmly rejected Real ID. Fifteen states and the District of Columbia have not decided yet, meaning they could fall into this category too.

Q: So if I live in Maine, South Carolina, Montana, Oklahoma, or New Hampshire, and I want to fly out of any U.S. airport starting May 11, what happens?
The Bush administration has not answered that question. The Transportation Security Administration referred our questions to the Department of Homeland Security. A Homeland Security spokesman told us: “That’s an operational, ongoing issue at this point in time. We’ll need to be a bit closer in.”

One likely situation is that starting May 11, security checkpoints at all U.S. airports will have a Real ID and a non-Real ID line. Non-Real ID would be in the slow line, which Homeland Security predicts will involve “delays” and “enhanced security screening.” (One official with the Portland International Airport even joked about a mandatory “full body cavity search.”)

Q: Can I use a U.S. passport instead to get in the fast line?
Yes. If you don’t have one, you’d better apply soon. The State Department estimates four to six weeks for processing.

Will I be able to fly after May 11?

Starting May 11, unless your home state agrees to comply with the federal Real ID Act or unless it asks for an extension, you should expect problems going through security at airports. Click a state below to see what that state has told us about whether or not its ID cards will meet Real ID requirements.

Real ID by state

Alabama

Alabama plans to ask for an extension. “At this point, one option that’s being considered is a ‘hybrid’ approach to Real ID in Alabama, by which the state would offer compliant and noncompliant driver licenses and ID cards. We do plan to ask for an extension.”
–Dorris Teague, Public Information/Education Unit, Alabama Department of Public Safety

Alaska

“Alaska does indeed intend to request an extension to meet the requirements of Real ID. We haven’t submitted our extension request yet, but we fully intend to do so in the very near future.”
–Whitney Brewster, spokeswoman, Alaska Division of Motor Vehicles

Arizona

Arizona says that Homeland Security has said the state will “automatically get an extension” because of an existing plan to revamp its licenses, according to Jeanine L’Ecuyer, spokeswoman for Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano. That means its driver’s licenses and state ID cards will be treated as Real ID-compliant until December 31, 2009.

But L’Ecuyer added that final compliance is still an open question: “Will Arizona do Real ID? Maybe is the honest answer to that question.”

Arkansas

“We have asked for the first extension, but in the extension letter, we say we are not committed to implementing Real ID. We just need time to look at it and evaluate it.”
–Mike Munns, assistant revenue commissioner for Arkansas

California

California reiterated in January 2008 that it has no problems complying with Real ID. Its statement did, however, mention “privacy and funding issues, which continue to be a concern for California.”

Colorado

“We requested and received the extension until 2009, and we expect to be fully on the road to implementing Real ID satisfactorily by that point to get another extension in the future if we need to.”
–Mark Couch, spokesman for the Colorado Department of Revenue

Connecticut

Connecticut has not decided whether to comply with Real ID, reject it completely, or request an extension to keep its options open. “We are still studying the issue. (Department of Motor Vehicles Commissioner Robert Ward) remains supportive of the concept, but no firm decisions have been made.”
–Bill Seymour, spokesman for the motor vehicle commissioner.

Delaware

Delaware has not decided whether to comply with Real ID, reject it completely, or request an extension to keep its options open. “The DMV director and secretary are going to give a briefing to the governor next month, February. Because we’ve got until the end of March to decide…After they have this meeting with the governor is when we’re going to make our official choice.”
–Mike Williams, spokesman, Delaware Department of Transportation

Florida

Florida has not announced whether it will or will not request an extension. “Thanks to the leadership of our governor, cabinet, and legislature, Florida already provides our citizens a secure and safe driver license and identification card, and we are well postured to incorporate any changes that may be required. We applaud the federal government on their efforts to protect all of our citizens with the implementation of this act.”
–Ann Nucatola, public information director, Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles

Georgia

Georgia has not decided whether to comply with Real ID, reject it completely, or request an extension to keep its options open. The legislature has approved legislation authorizing the governor to reject Real ID if federal regulations do not “adequately safeguard and restrict use of the information in order to protect the privacy rights” of Georgia residents. “Our legislature has to make that determination within the next few months.”
–Susan Sports, public information officer, Georgia Department of Driver Services

Hawaii

Hawaii has filed for and received an extension. “We are moving forward on reviewing the rules and coordinating with the county DMVs to see how the rules can be implemented and coordinated.”
–Russell Pang, chief of Media Relations for Hawaii Gov. Linda Lingle

Idaho

“We’ve asked for an extension, but we still have serious concerns and reservations about it and its future here is to be determined.”
–Jon Hanian, spokesman for Idaho Gov. C.L. “Butch” Otter

Illinois

“We have every intention to file for an extension.”
–Henry Haupt, spokesman for Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White

Indiana

“We do intend to comply, and we have filed for and received an extension. Over the past couple of years, we’ve done some security enhancements to our own system that we were going to do regardless of how Real ID rolled out.”
–Dennis Rosebrough, spokesman, Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles

Iowa

“Yes, Iowa will be implementing Real ID and we will be requesting the first extension.”
–Dena Gray-Fisher, spokeswoman, Iowa Department of Transportation

Kansas

“Kansas has obtained authorization for the extension, which gets us out to the end of 2009 and affords us the opportunity to see where we are, negotiate a few different things with our vendor and others. It gives us a little breathing room.”
–Carmen Alldritt, director of the division of vehicles, Kansas Department of Revenue

Kentucky

“A Real ID would be an entirely new document. The current KY license would not meet the new standard…Kentucky has asked for the extension.”
–Mark Brown, spokesman, Kentucky Transportation Cabinet

Louisiana

State officials have not responded to repeated requests for information about Real ID compliance. One bill in the state legislature asks Congress to repeal Real ID, while a response to a DMV survey says that “We believe that Louisiana will meet standards.”

Maine

Will not comply. “There is currently no effort being undertaken within the state to roll back the public law preventing the secretary from moving in the direction of Real ID. It is a situation where Mainers may face some inconvenience at airports come May 11.”
–Don Cookson, spokesman for Maine Secretary of State Matthew Dunlap

Maryland

Maryland requested a deadline extension. “We’re still going through 300 pages of federal guidelines. We’re currently evaluating those guidelines and then we’ll develop a program that is Real ID-compliant.”
–Jack Cahalan, spokesman, Maryland Department of Transportation

Massachusetts

“Massachusetts did apply for the waiver and received it. We are basically telling (drivers who call us) that we’ve gotten the exemption, which means that you are going to show your valid driver’s license to get on an airplane just as you have in the past until December 2009.”
–Ann Dufresne, spokeswoman, Massachusetts Department of Motor Vehicles.

After December 2009, states can apply for a second extension, but will receive it only if they’re taking affirmative steps to comply.

Michigan

Michigan has not decided whether to comply with Real ID, reject it completely, or request an extension to keep its options open. “At this point, we have not requested a waiver. We’re still trying to work out some of the details.”
–Kelly Chesney, spokeswoman for Michigan Secretary of State Terri Lyn Land. The state’s Web site
says: “There are still many unknowns…Michigan law changes will be necessary.”

Minnesota

“We did receive a letter from Homeland Security and it said that our extension had been granted, so that would mean that our documents, our driver’s licenses, and ID cards, are compliant until December 31, 2009.”
–Minnesota Department of Public Safety spokeswoman

Mississippi

No response to repeated inquiries.

Missouri

No response to repeated inquiries. The state Web site says: “January 11, 2008 the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) released the final rule establishing minimum security standards for state-issued driver licenses and identification cards. The rule is 284 pages in length. The Missouri Department of Revenue is in the process of reviewing the rules to determine the impact to Missouri.”

Montana

Montana’s legislature has flatly rejected Real ID in a bill that the governor has signed into law. Gov. Brian Schwitzer has called on his colleagues in other states this month to join Montana in opposition to this “major threat to the privacy, constitutional rights, and pocketbooks of ordinary Montanans.” Lynn Solomon, a spokeswoman for the Montana attorney general’s office, told us: “Right now we’re not even sure that the existing Montana law allows us to ask for the extension. We’re just sort of sitting tight.”

Nebraska

“Nebraska has requested and has been granted an initial extension. That extension does not require you to technically commit to Real ID compliance–it says we need some time, and that’s what we said, we need some time. Whether or not Nebraska is ultimately going to be compliant is really for the most part right now in the hands of the legislature.”
–Beverly Neth, director, Nebraska Department of Motor Vehicles

Nevada

Nevada has applied for a deadline extension. “Certainly this is something that the governor supports and believes is important, although he believes in some respects it is an unfunded mandate and that the federal government should assist the states with the funding,” Melissa Subbotin, spokeswoman for Nevada Gov. Jim Gibbons, told us.

New Hampshire

New Hampshire last year enacted a law that prohibits the state from changing its driver’s license and identification card laws to comply with Real ID. It doesn’t appear that is going to change. “As it stands now, the only action that has been taken is legislation to keep us out of it. There would be no way that the state could pass amending legislation or undo that within that time frame; it’s just not going to happen. I don’t see that anything could be done in the intervening time to change it,” Jim Van Dongen, spokesman for the New Hampshire Department of Safety, told us.

New Jersey

New Jersey has not decided whether to comply with Real ID, reject it completely, or request an extension to keep its options open. Mike Horan, a spokesman for the New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission, said there are a number of factors that the state is considering, including cost and wait times at the DMV. “Are the Real ID requirements going to add 15 minutes more to a person’s wait? Are we going to need a new computer system to manage the requirements? We’re in a bit of a fiscal crisis like many states across the country. That’s a major concern–there are so many things that are in need of money.”

New Mexico

New Mexico has applied for the first deadline extension from the Department of Homeland Security. “We have not made a final decision on whether we are going to implement Real ID or not,” said David Harwell, a spokesman for the state department of taxation and revenue, which issues driver’s licenses. “We are in the process of studying all of the regulations that were issued by Secretary (Michael) Chertoff several weeks ago.”

New York

New York has already received an “unsolicited extension” from the Department of Homeland Security as part of a recent agreement to change its driver license policies, said Jennifer Givner, deputy press secretary for Gov. Eliot Spitzer.

North Carolina

North Carolina said it will request an extension if it’s necessary for state residents to travel after May 11, but has not yet done so. “We’re feeling that we are on track to follow along the Real ID plan as it is right now. We don’t see any situation at this point where our citizens’ driver’s licenses would be in jeopardy and keeping them out of federal buildings or off of airplanes…Basically we feel like we’re in a good place.”
–Marge Howell, spokeswoman, North Carolina Division of Motor Vehicles

North Dakota

North Dakota has applied for a deadline extension. “Our application is stating that we’d like the extension and we would still like to reserve the opportunity to investigate committing to full implementation,” said Linda Butts, deputy director of driver and vehicle services, North Dakota Department of Transportation. “The other thing that’s muddying the water is that so many of these rules are long-term and seem to continue to mutate and change a little bit, so that’s another thing I think all states are looking at is the cost of implementation. Are these truly going to be the rules in 2015? Will the rules today be the rules that are implemented five, seven years down the road?”

Ohio

Ohio said this month that it has applied for an extension and was the first state to receive one.

Oklahoma

Oklahoma’s legislature has approved legislation saying that Real ID “is inimical to the security and well-being of the people of Oklahoma” and, therefore, “the state of Oklahoma shall not participate in the implementation of the Real ID Act.” Paul Sund, spokesman for Oklahoma governor’s office, told us: “I’m not aware of any repeal efforts, but our legislature does not convene until February 4.”

Oregon

Oregon has requested and received an extension. In the longer term, however, the state may not comply. “Oregon hasn’t made a decision for or against compliance with Real ID. But since the final federal rules were released January 10, our legislature is likely to put that on its 2009 agenda.”
–David House, spokesman for the Oregon Department of Motor Vehicles

Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania has requested and received an extension. In the longer term, however, the state may not comply. “We’re undergoing a comprehensive review of those regulations right now to look at some potential options, the cost that would be involved and also the impact to the citizens of Pennsylvania. Being granted this initial extension just allows us more time to do that and allows the citizens of the commonwealth to continue using their state driver’s licenses and IDs through December 31, 2009.”
–Danielle Klinger, spokeswoman, Pennsylvania Department of Transportation

Rhode Island

Rhode Island has applied for and received the first deadline extension from DHS, according to state DMV spokeswoman Gina Zanni. “Our governor supports the Real ID initiative,” Zanni told us. “We have applied for part of the grant money that has been made available…we’d sure like some money.”

South Carolina

South Carolina has enacted legislation saying the state “shall not participate in the implementation of the federal Real ID Act.” Beth Parks, spokeswoman for the South Carolina Department of Motor Vehicles, told us: “Yes, it is true that South Carolina is a non-participatory state for Real ID. The South Carolina legislature is the only entity that can change that position. We are comparing the new regulations to the proposed regulations and our previous cost estimates. Once we have completed our review, we will provide information to South Carolina lawmakers and answer any questions they may have.”

South Dakota

“We’ve applied for an extension and received one, but we have not committed to Real ID yet,” said Mitch Krebs, press secretary for South Dakota Gov. Michael Rounds.

Tennessee

“The Department of Safety is conducting a detailed review of the final rules in order to fully evaluate the impact Real ID implementation will have on the citizens of the state of Tennessee. While we anticipate filing an extension, no official request has been signed as of this date. Keep in mind, an extension request is not necessarily an indication of our intent to comply.”
–Mike Browning, spokesman, Tennessee Department of Safety

Texas

Texas has not decided whether to comply with Real ID, reject it completely, or request an extension to keep its options open. “We’re still reading the fine print.” –Tela Mange, spokeswoman, Texas Department of Public Safety

Utah

Utah has requested and received a deadline extension. “Our driver’s license division is not a policy-making body. It would be up to the legislature and the governor. We are currently going through our legislative session–it just started. That will be one of the topics, whether to go through with it.”
–Sgt. Jeff Nigbur, spokesman, Utah Department of Public Safety

Vermont

“Vermont requested and was granted an extension until December 31, 2009.”
–John Zicconi, spokesman, Vermont Agency of Transportation

Virginia

Virginia has not decided whether to comply with Real ID, reject it completely, or request an extension to keep its options open. “The Virginia DMV is currently reviewing the regulations to determine our next steps.”
–Melanie Stokes, spokeswoman, Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles

Washington

Gov. Christine Gregoire signed legislation last year prohibiting the state from implementing Real ID unless the federal government provides funding and greater privacy protections. But, in an apparent effort to avoid inconveniencing state residents in May, Gregoire requested a compliance extension. “By not filing an extension, effective May 11, Washingtonians would have automatically been subject to additional security screenings at airports and federal buildings,” Gregoire said in a recent statement. It also said: “I will not allow for confusion and chaos at our busy airports. This extension will allow our residents to continue use of their Washington state driver license or ID card to board planes and enter federal buildings…The federal regulations on Real ID compliance are ambiguous, and I share funding and privacy concerns held by many state legislators.”

West Virginia

West Virginia has not decided whether to comply with Real ID, reject it completely, or request an extension to keep its options open. “In West Virginia we are still weighing our options based upon the recent changes to the act’s requirements.”
–Susan Watkins, spokeswoman, West Virginia Department of Transportation

Wisconsin

Wisconsin has not decided whether to comply with Real ID, reject it completely, or request an extension to keep its options open. “We’ve not made a final determination regarding next steps for Wisconsin as it relates to Real ID,” said Patrick Fernan, operations manager for the Wisconsin Department of Motor Vehicles. “We have not requested an extension as of yet.”

Wyoming

Wyoming plans to request a deadline extension. “Unless the law for implementation of Real ID is changed in Washington D.C. or our Wyoming Legislature passes legislation not to comply with the Real ID, we will work toward implementation,” said Jim O’Connor, support services administrator for the Wyoming Department of Transportation. He added, however: “We are concerned about this unfunded federal mandate and the effect it will have on the people of Wyoming.”

Washington, D.C.

The nation’s capital has not decided whether to comply with Real ID, reject it completely, or request an extension to keep its options open. “The DC DMV is still deciding on next steps,” said public information officer Janis Hazel. “Nothing further to report at this time.”

Q: If I live in one of those noncompliant states, how do I access federal buildings, including courthouses, veteran’s hospitals, Social Security offices, and so on?
At airports, at least, you can get in the slow lane and eventually get past security. There’s no equivalent option for federal buildings that require ID: it appears that you’ll simply be denied access unless you have a passport or military ID. (Remember, of course, that not all federal buildings require ID.)

Ironically, one option for federal agencies is to stop requiring photo ID completely. Another is to be liberal in what they accept as valid identification; you could always try your Sam’s Club card or library card instead. Homeland Security already has relaxed supposedly strict rules about what ID is accepted at border crossings.

Q: Will the federal government issue more regulations about when I have to show a Real ID license?
Probably. One Homeland Security official told Congress last year that Real ID could be used for “reducing unlawful employment, voter fraud, and underage drinking.” Another recently suggested that Americans buying cold medicines like Sudafed with pseudoephedrine could be required to show Real ID.

Q: Does Homeland Security have the authority to do that kind of expansion, or can only Congress expand Real ID?
Homeland Security has the authority. The text of the law says that, starting May 11, “a federal agency may not accept, for any official purpose, a driver’s license or identification card issued by a state to any person unless the state is meeting the requirements of this section.” Official purpose is defined to include “any other purposes” that Homeland Security thinks is wise.

The potential list of “purposes” could be long. Real ID could in theory be required for traveling on Amtrak, collecting federal welfare benefits, signing up for Social Security, applying for student loans, interacting with the U.S. Postal Service, entering national parks, and so on.

Q: What about buying firearms?
That’s an open question. Homeland Security last month refused to rule out requiring Real ID for firearm purchases in the future.

When asked about requiring Real ID to buy a firearm, Homeland Security replied: “DHS will continue to consider additional ways in which a Real ID license can or should be used and will implement any changes to the definition of ‘official purpose’ or determinations regarding additional uses for Real ID consistent with applicable laws and regulatory requirements. DHS does not agree that it must seek the approval of Congress as a prerequisite to changing the definition in the future.”

Q: Which presidential candidates voted for Real ID?
All of them who were members of Congress at the time voted for Real ID except Rep. Ron Paul, a Republican.

The vote in Congress was overwhelmingly in favor of the proposal, part of a broader government spending and tsunami relief bill that was approved unanimously by the Senate and by a vote of 368 to 58 in the House of Representatives. Sens. Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, and John McCain voted for it.

Q: What kind of information about me is going to be stored on the Real ID card?
This hasn’t changed substantially since our earlier FAQ published nearly three years ago. At a minimum: name, birth date, sex, ID number, a digital photograph, address, and a “common machine-readable technology” that Homeland Security approves. The card must also sport “physical security features designed to prevent tampering, counterfeiting, or duplication of the document for fraudulent purposes.”

Q: Does “common machine-readable technology” mean RFID?
Not at this point. Homeland Security has said it is not requiring that states use RFID chips, or radio frequency ID chips, in Real ID licenses. Instead, what’s required is a two-dimensional barcode called PDF417. Many states already print this or a similar barcode on their driver’s licenses.

Q: Will the information about me on the PDF417 barcode, such as my home address, be encrypted to prevent a bank or a bar or any other business from swiping it and adding me to their database?
No. Homeland Security said it would be too much work “given law enforcement’s need for easy access to the information.” It is, however, “open to considering technology alternatives to the PDF417 2D bar code in the future to provide greater privacy protections,” which could mean RFID chips in the future. U.S. passports already have RFID chips embedded.

Q: What kind of data will states share under Real ID?
Real ID will require states to share detailed information about anyone with a state ID card or driver’s license, perhaps through a network called AAMVAnet, which the Department of Transportation is paying to expand in hopes of supporting the massive amount of data that will be exchanged. Databases owned by Social Security and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services will also be integrated. The idea is that this will allow documents such as birth certificates to be validated online.

Many of the details remain unclear because Homeland Security has not made final decisions, including about whether to build on top of AAMVAnet or expand a centralized federal database already used for commercial driver’s licensing. Computer scientists and privacy advocates unsuccessfully urged Homeland Security to reject Real ID as “unworkable” because of the security and scalability concerns.

Q: If there’s no encryption, is there at least a federal law saying that banks and bars and so on are prohibited from compiling databases of personal information based on Real ID licenses?
No. Some states like California and Texas have passed laws restricting the use of information from a swiped driver’s license. But there is no federal law.

Q: I heard something about Homeland Security giving states more time to issue Real ID-compliant licenses. What is the absolute deadline for all of this to be finished?
To make Real ID more palatable to state governments, Homeland Security extended the final deadline beyond what the text of the statute says.

In the final rule released last month, DHS said the deadline for all states to comply would be December 1, 2017. Only states that can prove they are well on their way to implementing Real ID qualify for this deadline extension.

Q: What does this mean for me if I live in one of the states that will eventually comply with Real ID?
It’s difficult to answer this question because state governments told us they haven’t had enough time to digest the final rules that Homeland Security published last month.

In general, state motor vehicle agencies will be required to verify that you are who you claim to be, which could require that you provide additional paperwork and original documents. This could mean higher costs and longer wait times at the DMV.

Q: Why do we have Real ID, anyway?
It depends on who you ask. The Bush administration will tell you that it stems from the 9/11 Commission’s suggestions, and it’ll make the country safer. The administration will also point out that some of the September 11 hijackers had fake driver’s licenses.

Critics respond by saying the September 11 hijackers could have just as easily boarded those flights using foreign passports. Another criticism is that Real ID licenses are tantamount to a national ID card, something unique in American history.

Q: What about religious objections?
Thousands of Americans do not have photographs on their driver’s licenses or state ID cards, usually because of religious objections. Approximately a dozen states currently allow this, but Real ID does not. Therefore, those licenses without photos will not be valid for flying or federal buildings starting May 11.

Q: Is there any chance that the next administration or Congress will roll back these requirements before they kick in?
It’s a little early to tell. Obama and Clinton have both expressed some concerns about Real ID, while McCain enthusiastically supports it.

Q: Is all this really going to happen? Or could Homeland Security change its mind?
Yes, it’s possible that something could change. But neither Homeland Security nor the non-Real ID states show any signs of blinking. In addition, any legal changes would probably have to originate with Congress–where a proposal to amend Real ID has been stuck in a Senate committee since February 2007.


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DHS: U.S. Cops Access To Sat-Surveillance Is Go

Posted by kandylini on April 3, 2008

Source: UK Register

US Homeland Security overlord Michael Chertoff has told reporters that he believes plans for increased use of satellite surveillance by American law-enforcement agencies are ready to move forward. However, Democratic politicians remain unconvinced that adequate privacy and civil liberties safeguards are in place.

“I think the way is now clear to stand NAO up and go warm,” said Chertoff, briefing journalists about the proposed National Applications Office.

NAO would allow US police, immigration, drug-enforcement and other officials to have access to data from various US satellites passing above America. It is understood that the information would be supplied mostly by spacecraft which at the moment are used for meteorological and geological surveying, or other scientific tasks. Satellites of this type can often deliver high-resolution images which would also be useful to law enforcement.

Purpose-built US surveillance satellites operated on behalf of military and intelligence agencies also pass above the US frequently. However, even the location of such spacecraft is often deemed to be a secret – for all that it may be well-known to amateur skywatchers. The capabilities of the true spybirds are even more jealously guarded, but realistically this information would soon become common knowledge if ordinary coppers were able to get such imagery.

Therefore, the new NAO probably won’t offer very wide access – if any – to America’s proper sky-spies. But it could provide a wealth of information all the same, and some US legislators are concerned about the implications.

Chertoff pooh-poohed such worries, saying that detailed assessments had been done and that Congresspersons had been briefed. The DHS chief believed that there’s a “good process in place to make sure there aren’t any… transgressions”. The DHS has also pointed out that various feds including the Secret Service* and FBI have used satellite imagery of the US in various previous investigations on a case-by-case basis.

Even so, plans for warm erection of the NAO could face a bumpy ride from Democrat-dominated committees on Capitol Hill.

Coverage of the press briefing is available from CNET here.

*Note for non-US readers: While “Secret Service” sounds like it might be to do with spies, this is not the case in the States. The Secret Service is part of the Treasury, and does things like tracking down counterfeiters. It also provides the bodyguards for prominent US politicians, like the specialist protection branch of the Met Police in the UK. It seems that the Treasury agents were the main federal law-enforcement agency in existence when US presidents started to need close protection, and got the job by default.

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Congress, the Bush Adminstration and Continuity of Government Planning

Posted by kandylini on April 1, 2008

From CounterPunch

Peter Dale Scott

Mon, 31 Mar 2008

In August 2007, Congressman Peter DeFazio, a member of the House Homeland Security Committee, told the House that he and the rest of his Committee had been barred from reviewing parts of National Security Presidential Directive 51, the White House supersecret plans to implement so-called “Continuity of Government” in the event of a mass terror attack or natural disaster. (1)

Norm Ornstein, of the conservative American Enterprise Institute, commented, “I cannot think of one good reason” for denial. Ornstein added, “I find it inexplicable and probably reflective of the usual, knee-jerk overextension of executive power that we see from this White House.” (2)

The story, ignored by the mainstream press, involved more than the usual tussle between the legislative and executive branches of the U.S. Government. What was at stake was a contest between Congress’s constitutional powers of oversight, and a set of policy plans that could be used to suspend or modify the constitution.

There is nothing wrong with disaster planning per se. Like all governments, the U.S. government must develop plans for the worst contingencies. But Congress has a right to be concerned about Continuity of Government (COG) plans refined by Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld over the past quarter century, which journalists have described as involving suspension of the constitution. (3)

In the 1980s, a secret group of planners inside and outside the government were assigned, by an Executive Order, to develop a response to a nuclear attack in which the U.S. government had been decapitated, forcing an alternative to the constitutional rules of succession. Two of these planners were Dick Cheney, then a Congressman, and Donald Rumsfeld, then a private citizen and CEO of the G.D. Searle drug company.

“One of the awkward questions we faced was whether to reconstitute Congress after a nuclear attack.It was decided that no, it would be easier to operate without them,” said one of the COG planners in the 1980s, who spoke to James Mann (The Rise of the Vulcans, 141-42). James Bamford reported the same remark in his book Pretext for War (p. 74).

After the end of the Cold War, the urgency of coming up with plans faded. The COG nuclear planning project “has less than six months to live,” reported Tim Weiner of the New York Times. (April 17, 1994). Mann and Bamford concluded, wrongly, that all the COG planning of the Reagan era had been abandoned.

In fact, Reagan’s Executive Order 12656, issued in 1988, remained in effect. The order states that Continuity of Government procedures are called for in the event of “any occurrence, including natural disaster, military attack, technological emergency, or other emergency, that seriously degrades or seriously threatens the national security of the United States.” (4)

Under Clinton, some parts of the planning, presumably military, were continued by a group including Rumsfeld and others whose roster (according to Andrew Cockburn) was “filled almost exclusively with Republican hawks.” Cockburn quotes one participant, a former Pentagon official, who said “They’d meet, do the exercise, but also sit around and castigate the Clinton administration in the most extreme way.” (5)

According to the 9/11 Commission Report (p. 326; cf. p. 38), “Contingency plans for the continuity of government” were implemented on September 11, 2001. (6) But what measures were invoked remains unclear.

Some clues may be supplied by COG’s past history. COG planning in the 1980s was handled by the Federal Emergency Management Agency and its controversial director, Louis Giuffrida. According to a Miami Herald article by Alfonso Chardy on July 5, 1987, Giuffrida’s plans included “suspension of the Constitution,” along with detailed arrangements for the declaration of martial law. (7)

Those suspicious of what COG means today have pointed to a number of post 9/11 steps to facilitate the implementation of martial law, including the creation of a new military command (NORTHCOM) for the continental United States. They note also Homeland Security’s strategic plan Endgame, whose stated goal is the creation of detention camps designed to “remove all removable aliens,” including “potential terrorists.”

Then in 2007 National Security Presidential Directive 51 (NSPD 51), issued by the White House, empowered the President to personally ensure “continuity of government” in the event of any “catastrophic emergency.” (8) According to the Washington Post (May 10, 2007), this directive “formalizes a shift of authority,” from the Department of Homeland Security to the White House, in establishing ” a shadow government” after an emergency. (9) Congress has yet to hold a single hearing on NSPD 51. (10)

NSPD 51 contains “classified Continuity Annexes” which shall “be protected from unauthorized disclosure.” Congressman DeFazio twice requested to see these Annexes, the second time in a letter cosigned by House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Bennie Thompson and Oversight Subcommittee Chairman Christopher Carney. It was these requests that the White House denied.

Without full disclosure, such suspicions will only fester and distract from the real issue: the role of Congress in constitutional government. In the event of national emergency, Congress must be at the heart of the defense of democratic government and American territory. It is reasonable for the citizenry to ask, “How do Continuity of Government plans preserve and protect the role of the popularly chosen branch of government?” The answer is, we simply don’t know.

DeFazio’s inability to get access to the NSPD Annexes is less than reassuring. If members of the Homeland Security Committee cannot enforce their right to read secret plans of the Executive Branch, then the systems of checks and balances established by the U.S. Constitution would seem to be failing.

To put it another way, if the White House is successful in frustrating DeFazio, then Continuity of Government planning has arguably already superseded the Constitution as a higher authority.

Will Congress insist on its right of review COG planning? The answer to this question will depend on discussion in the blogosphere, the degree of pressure exerted by the electorate on their representatives, and the questions asked the men and women who would be president.

Peter Dale Scott is the author of The Road to 9/11.

Notes.

1. Congressional Record, August 2, 2007. The text of National Security Presidential Directive 51 can be seen here.

2. Jeff Kosseff, The Oregonian, July 20, 2007.

3. Scott, The Road to 9/11, 183-87; citing Ross Gelbspan, Break-ins, Death Threats, and the FBI: The Covert War against the Central America Movement (Boston: South End Press, 1991), 184; Alfonso Chardy, Miami Herald, July 5, 1987.

4. The provisions of Executive Order 12656 of November 18, 1988, appear at 53 FR 47491, 3 CFR, 1988 Comp., p. 585, “Executive Order 12656-Assignment of Emergency Preparedness Responsibilities,” . The Washington Post (Gellman and Schmidt, “Shadow Government Is at Work in Secret,” March 1, 2002) later claimed, incorrectly, that Executive Order 12656 dealt only with “a nuclear attack.”

5. Andrew Cockburn, Rumsfeld: His Rise, Fall, and Catastrophic Legacy (New York: Scribner, 2007), 88)

6. 9/11 Commission Report, 326, cf. 38; Scott, Road to 9/11, 220-29.

7. Alfonso Chardy, “Reagan Aides and the ‘Secret’ Government, Miami Herald, July 5, 1987.

8. National Security Presidential Directive 51.

9. Spencer S. Hsu, “Bush Changes Continuity Plan: Administration, Not DHS, Would Run Shadow Government,” Washington Post, May 10, 2007,

10. Lewis Seiler and Dan Hamburg, San Francisco Chronicle (February 4, 2008),

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Feds Tout New Domestic Intelligence Centers

Posted by kandylini on March 22, 2008

http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2008/03/feds-tout-new-d.html

Federal, state and local cops are huddling together in domestic intelligence dens around the nation to fuse anti-terror information and tips in ways they never have before, and they want the American people to know about it — sort of.

Some of the nation’s top law enforcement and anti-terror officials got together to hold press briefings Tuesday and Wednesday mornings at the second annual National Fusion Center conference held in San Francisco.

Homeland Security Under Secretary Charlie Allen, formerly of the CIA, described how sharing threat assessments, and even the occasional raw intel, with the new fusion centers marks a cultural shift from the Cold War era. Back then, spies treated everyone, other departments and agencies included, as suspicious.

“Things have changed remarkably in Washington. We are talking to each other,” Allen said Tuesday. “I am from the shadows of the CIA where in the Cold War, we followed a different model. That model does not apply for the kinds of threats we have today that are borderless. The threats are so different and so remarkably dangerous for our citizens.”

The fifty or so U.S. fusion centers are where the federal, state and local cops share intelligence, sift data for clues, run down reports of suspicious packages and connect dots in an effort to detect and thwart terrorism attacks, drug smuggling and gang fighting.

russellporter

Iowa’s fusion center director Russell Porter ran the sparsely attended press conference, flanked by FBI intelligence director Tracy Reinhold, DHS civil liberties officer David Gersten and the Justice Department’s privacy officer Kenneth Mortenson.(L to R)
Photo: Ryan Singel/Wired.com

Privacy and civil liberties groups are increasingly suspicious of the fusion centers, but state and local officials have complained for years that the feds don’t share any useful information. The 9/11 Commission agreed, blaming the CIA and FBI’s lack of information-sharing for wasted chances to stop the airline hijackings. The commission strongly urged they change their ways and put holes in so-called “stove pipes.” And in 2007, the Democrats boosted fusion centers’ stature and funding in the first bill they passed after taking control of Congress.

More than $130 million federal dollars have fed the development of the fusion centers in locations as diverse as Kansas and Northern California.On Tuesday, San Francisco police chief Heather Fong said the information flow was getting better, especially around big events being held in the city.

“When we get information, it’s not how much can we amass and keep to ourselves,” Fong said. “It’s how much information can we obtain but appropriately share so that it positively assists others in doing their jobs around the country and the world.”

The dominant catchphrase from the officials was that the centers need to focus on “all threats, all hazards.” That means that the fusion centers would be working on immigration, radicalization, demographic changes, hurricanes, biological and chemical threats, as well as common criminal activity. Officials say the centers must look at even the most mundane crimes, since they can be used to fund terrorism.

By way of example, Los Angeles police chief Bratton cites the investigation of a string of gas station stick-ups in L.A. in 2005. The robbery investigation led to the prosecution of militant Muslim convicts who were planning attacks on synagogues. That, Bratton said, illustrates why these intelligence centers need to be analyzing run-of-the-mill crimes.

“Information that might seem innocuous may have some connection to terrorism,” Bratton said.

But critics say that “all hazards, all threats” approach sounds suspiciously like the government is building a distributed domestic intelligence service that could easily begin keeping tabs on Americans exercising their First Amendment rights. The scope also seems at odds with the federal government’s Information Sharing Environment guidelines, which say these centers are supposed to focus on terrorism.

California’s Anti-Terrorism Information Center admitted to spying on anti-war groups in 2003. And Denver’s police department built their own secret spy files on Quakers and 200 other organizations.

Earlier this year, the ACLU issued a warning report about Fusion Centers, complete with an interactive fusion center map, earlier this year. The report, entitled What’s Wrong With Fusion Centers, cited concerns about military units operating in the centers, as well as the potential for scope creep and data mining. How, the group asked, can citizens contest information about themselves, given the patchwork of state, local and federal sunshine laws that may or may not apply.

But in a conference keynote Tuesday, Congresswoman Jane Harman (D-California), a powerful force in intelligence matters and funding, pooh-poohed the ACLU’s concerns, and said she supported both fusion centers, and civil liberties.

“I was frustrated when I met with the [ACLU] report authors and they could not point to a single instance of a fusion center violating someone’s civil rights or liberties,” Harman said. “In fact, state and local laws and protections in place at many fusion centers are more rigorous than their federal counterparts.”

Tim Sparapani, the ACLU’s top legislative lawyer in D.C., bristled at Harman’s remakrs. “Our prognosticating track record in identifying programs ripe for abuse of privacy and civil liberties is pretty solid,” Sparapani wrote in an e-mail that listed several other programs that the ACLU correctly raised warning flags on.

“That’s not luck,” he wrote. “It’s a trend based on seeing the surveillance industrial complex being built bit-by-bit and terabyte by terabyte. As sure as the sun rises in the east and sets in the west, if Fusion Centers aren’t built with rigid controls they will be privacy-invading monsters.

The ACLU points to Virginia, where legislators are moving to exempt their fusion center from government sunshine laws and give legal immunity to companies that report information — such as the name of a person accosted by a private security guard for taking pictures of a skyscraper.

On Wednesday, a trio of federal privacy and civil liberties officers, including the Department of Homeland Security’s chief privacy officer Hugo Teufel, promised they were working to make sure the centers respect citizens’ civil liberties and privacy.

David Gersten, the director of the civil rights and civil liberties programs at DHS, said he was working to expand their training course for Fusion Center employees to “include an examination of the history of privacy and civil liberties as they relate to intelligence and criminal investigations.”

That history includes the famous 1976 Church Committee report on the FBI’s notorious COINTELPRO spying program. The report warned in the introduction “Unless new and tighter controls are established by legislation, domestic intelligence activities threaten to undermine our democratic society and fundamentally alter its nature.

THREAT LEVEL asked conference attendees about the concerns over expanding the dissemination of intelligence given the continuing trouble innocent Americans have trying to get off the nation’s unified terrorist watch list.

Just this week, the Justice Department’s inspector general issued a watch list audit (.pdf), finding that FBI agents were watch-listing people who they weren’t even investigating. Moreover, since those names were added through a back channel, there was no scheduled review or follow-up to take them off the watch list.

Leonard Boyle, who runs the Terrorist Screening Center that curates and runs the watch list, said those problems are being fixed.

“We have streamlined our processes so [...] we avoid delays in amending nominations or removing people who ought to be removed because they are no longer suspected of having a nexus to terrorism,” Boyle said.

Also present at the conference was Ambassador Thomas McNamara who now works at the Director of National Intelligence Office. McNamara’s group is working on custom-built XML schemes, such as a standard for Suspicious Activity Reports. The idea is have all fusion centers and intelligence agencies using the same data format, to more easily share, search, sort and store intelligence data.

Surprisingly, a total of only three reporters showed up over two days of the conference to hear from the officials. THREAT LEVEL was the only media outlet to show up both days.

Despite journalists taking up only two of the fifty or so chairs, officials stuck with the formality of a press conference. Each day six to eight officials stood in a semicircle flanking the lectern and took turns issuing short remarks. After each set of speeches, the director of the Iowa fusion center and designated emcee Russell Porter allowed for a handful of questions from the two-reporter audience.

And as for information sharing, the conference’s openness extended only so far, and the press was not allowed into sensitive sessions such as “How to Generate Suspicious Activity Reporting” and “Commanders and Analysts: Sharing Perspectives.”

Government employees manning an informational booth for the Director of National Intelligence’s OpenSource.gov website refused to even describe the program, saying they would need to call in a press minder.

The website seems to indicate that the program is a way for the government to share intel reports composed by analysts who read international newspapers and watch TV stations from around the world.

THREAT LEVEL guessed we would not be able to sign up for the email blasts, due to our propensity to share information with the public. The taciturn DNI employees confirmed that fact, adding that they also couldn’t share the information from OpenSource.gov due to copyright issues.

See Also:

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