Washington, DC - New FBI Program Shares Tips with Local Police Agencies, NYPD Not participating |
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The program aims to get law enforcement at all levels sharing data quickly about suspicious activity and people, particularly in and around the nation's capital in the week leading up to the historic ceremony.
Officials say they are getting as many as 1,000 tips a day from the public.
Called e-Guardian, the program had been delayed and underwent a smaller pilot project before launching New Year's Eve as a system available to law enforcement agencies around the country.
Federal authorities hope the new system overcomes a drawback of another version, which lets police report their suspicions to the FBI but doesn't allow officers to search the system for similar patterns in other jurisdictions.
The program "will allow all law enforcement to share threats and suspicious activity and hopefully prevent a terrorist attack," said FBI supervisor Gerald Rogero, in Washington.
Of the 1,000 tips, a dozen might be worth noting in the new system.
With e-Guardian, Rogero said, those specific reports can be quickly checked by police in far-flung jurisdictions in case they have noticed something similar, such as a wave of uniform thefts or stolen military equipment.
Any law enforcement officer with an Internet connection and an account on the system can access e-Guardian.
That ease of access could be the worst thing about the program, said American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) policy counsel Michael German.
"The concern is, what's being collected, who is it being shared with, and who is responsible for any action taken as a result?" said German, a former FBI agent. "If the federal government is creating this national system, it's their responsibility that only the proper and correct information is being put in."
Federal officials say there is a vetting process already in place to check the accuracy of the information put into the system. Users are trained in civil liberties protections.
Currently, more than 400 law enforcment officials have opened individual e-Guardian accounts. Agency officials hope it will prove useful and eventually spread to the 18,000 different law enforcement agencies in the country.
Since the 2001 terror attacks, the government has launched a number of different programs to both analyze and share threat information quickly. Early incarnations were criticized as haphazard.
FBI officials say e-Guardian will become part of a bigger, faster system of suspicious activity reporting spanning intelligence agencies and the Department of Homeland Security.
FBI Assistant Director Ronald Ruecker said the new system will allow "near-real time information sharing with our other federal, state, local, tribal, and campus public safety partners around the country."
Not everyone is sold, however.
The New York Police Department is not participating because they say they already have a threat-sharing system through their joint terrorism task force with the FBI.
NYPD spokesman Paul Browne said e-Guardian "is for smaller jurisdictions that don't have that relationship."
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Read Comments (5) — Post Yours »
1
Jan 13, 2009 at 09:20 PM bigwheeel Says:
...Another reason [for the NYPD not participating in his program] might be because the New York City Police Dep't already has their own infrastructure of information gathering and coordinated action that in some cases surpasses that of the FBI!
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Jan 13, 2009 at 08:29 PM Anonymous Says:
the nypd has their own extensive intelligence nextwork. believe it or not, the nypd actually has officers gathering intelligence overseas in covert operations. the fbi no longer really exists. the fbi exists for its own existence, if you know what I mean.
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Jan 13, 2009 at 11:32 PM hatzolah bp Says:
“ the nypd has their own extensive intelligence nextwork. believe it or not, the nypd actually has officers gathering intelligence overseas in covert operations. the fbi no longer really exists. the fbi exists for its own existence, if you know what I mean. ”
We were actually lectured by nypd anti terror task force at hotzolah bp garage they are way more advanced
4
Jan 14, 2009 at 06:03 AM Anonymous Says:
I used to turn over information to the nypd task force because the FBI was not intrested. This goes back to 911 era. Its true the FBI refused to take information but the NYPD would come to my home in Boro park once a week. I give them credit. Now I stopped my information gathering because my wife does not wat me to. I guess she comes first.
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Jan 14, 2009 at 01:13 AM Anonymous Says:
Reply to bp hatzalah, I used to think the FBI is still something, now I'm sold that they're over because the nypd anti terror unit lectured in your garage. :)