axis


The FBI's Department of Precrime ( 0) Printer friendly page Print This
By News Bulletin
Anti Fascist Calling
Wednesday, May 6, 2009

From COINTELPRO to the illegal targeting of antiwar activists and Muslim-Americans, the FBI is America's premier political police agency. And now, from the folks who  brought us Wi-Fi hacking, viral computer spyware and al-Qaeda triple agent Ali Mohamed comes the Bureau's Department of Precrime!

A chilling new report by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) reveals the breadth and scope of the FBI's Investigative Data Warehouse (IDW), the Bureau's massive data-mining project.

With more than a billion records "many of which contain information on American citizens," EFF is calling on Congress to demand FBI accountability and strict oversight of this Orwellian project. By all accounts IDW is huge and growing at a geometric pace. According to the Bureau's own narrative,

The IDW received its initial authority to operate in September 2005, and successfully completed a Federal Information Security Management Act audit in May 2007. As of September 2008, the IDW had: 7,223 active user accounts; 3,826 FBI  personnel trained on the system, and 997,368,450 unique searchable documents. The IDW  transitioned to the operations and maintenance phase during FY 2008. (Federal Bureau of Investigation, "Investigative Data Warehouse," no date)

EFF notes that "the Library on Congress by way of comparison, has about 138 million  (138,313,427) items in its collection."

Kurt Opsahl, EFF's Senior Staff Attorney and the author of the new report said: "The  IDW includes more than four times as many documents as the Library of Congress, and  the FBI has asked for millions of dollars to data-mine this warehouse, using unproven  science in an attempt to predict future crimes from past behavior. We need to know  all of what's in the IDW, and how our privacy will be protected."

In 2008, the National Academy of Science's National Research Council issued a stinging report that questioned the efficacy of data-mining as an investigative tool for combatting terrorism.

That report, "Protecting Individual Privacy in the Struggle Against Terrorists: A  Framework for Assessment," concluded that automated programs such as IDW that collect and mine data should be evaluated for their impact on the privacy rights of citizens.  An NRC press release stated candidly:

Far more problematic are automated data-mining techniques that search databases  for unusual patterns of activity not already known to be associated with terrorists,  the report says. Although these methods have been useful in the private sector for  spotting consumer fraud, they are less helpful for counterterrorism precisely because  so little is known about what patterns indicate terrorist activity; as a result, they  are likely to generate huge numbers of false leads. Such techniques might, however,  have some value as secondary components of a counterterrorism system to assist human  analysts. Actions such as arrest, search, or denial of rights should never be taken  solely on the basis of an automated data-mining result, the report adds.

The committee also examined behavioral surveillance techniques, which try to  identify terrorists by observing behavior or measuring physiological states. There is  no scientific consensus on whether these techniques are ready for use at all in  counterterrorism, the report says; at most they should be used for preliminary  screening, to identify those who merit follow-up investigation. Further, they have  enormous potential for privacy violations because they will inevitably force targeted  individuals to explain and justify their mental and emotional states. (National  Academy of Science, National Research Council, "All Counterterrorism Programs That  Collect and Mine Data Should Be Evaluated for Effectiveness, Privacy Impacts," Press  Release, October 7, 2008)


  
Noting that the Bureau is withholding critical information from public scrutiny, and  that mining data gleaned from dozens of disparate sources is at the heart of IDW, EFF reports that the FBI "has identified only 38 of the 53 'data sources' that feed into the IDW," and has refused to hand over remaining documents, the result of a 2006 Freedom of Information Act request.

In a subsequent court action over the Bureau's document stonewall, the civil liberties' group reported that the Department of Justice told the court that "no additional material will be disclosed," despite Obama administration assertions that it has "new policies on open government."

Indeed, a May 12, 2005 email obtained by EFF from "an unidentified employee in the  FBI's Office of the General Counsel to FBI General Counsel Valerie Caproni" notes that the author was "nervous about mentioning PIA [Privacy Impact Assessment] in context of national security systems."

The author admitted that "It is true the FBI currently requires PIAs for NS [national  security] systems as well as non-NS systems." EFF reports that the author "thought  that the policy might change." Accordingly the anonymous writer "recommend[ed]  against raising congressional consciousness levels and expectations re NS PIAs."  Caproni's response is short: "ok."

However, "congressional consciousness levels" were raised after an August 30, 2006  Washington Post piece exposed the intrusive nature of the IDW system.

The Bureau's response? Several emails revealed the FBI's desire to play down privacy concerns, noting cynically: "I'm with [Redacted] in view that if everyone [Redacted] starts running around with their hair on fire on this, they will just be pouring gas on something that quite possibly would just fade away if we just shrug it off."

Given the corporate media's snail-like attention span when it comes to anything other  than puppies trapped in a well or the shenanigans of various "celebrities," it's a  sure-fire bet something as mundane as the rights of ordinary citizens "would just  fade away."

IDW: A Web-Based Panopticon and Cash Cow for Corporate Spooks

The Electronic Frontier Foundation's report, citing the Bureau's own description, characterizes the Investigative Data Warehouse as "the FBI's single largest repository of operational and intelligence information."

In 2005, FBI Section Chief Michael Morehart said that "IDW is a centralized, web- enabled, closed system repository for intelligence and investigative data."  Unidentified FBI agents have described it as "one-stop shopping" for FBI agents and  an "uber-Google." According to the Bureau, "[t]he IDW system provides data storage,  database management, search, information presentation, and security services."

Documents released to EFF show that the FBI began spending funds on IDW in 2002 and that "system implementation was completed in FY 2005." Version 1.1 was released in July 2004 "with enhanced functionality, including batch processing capabilities."

But as with all things related to "national security," early-on in the game the FBI forged a "public-private partnership" with spooky corporations in the defense and  security industry, including Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC), Convera and Chiliad to develop the project.

As the Project on Government Oversight (POGO) notes in their Federal Contractor Misconduct Database, the San Diego-based SAIC has paid out some $14.5 million in fines on $5.3 billion in revenue largely derived from contracts in the defense, intelligence and security fields.

Misconduct ranged from false claims and defective pricing to conflict of interest violations. Last August, SAIC was forced to drop its bid with the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) for the agency's TOPOFF 5 national disaster drill "after allegations of improprieties in the contracting process" were uncovered, according to Washington Technology.

Indeed, SAIC had been hired by the FBI to build an early version of IDW known as the  Virtual Case File (VCF). According to Washington Technology, SAIC was contracted by  the Bureau in 2001 to build VCF "but pulled the plug in 2005 after realizing the system would not work."

The 2007 appropriations bill directed the Bureau to "retrieve as much as $104 million from the defaulted VCF contract" and in unusual language for the Senate, "expects FBI  to use all means necessary, including legal action, to recover all erroneous charges from the VCF contractor," Washington Technology revealed.

Federal Computer Week reported in 2005 that Aerospace, an independent contractor  hired to evaluate the system concluded that SAIC "did a poor coding job" and that it was "virtually impossible to update the system."

Despite these revelations, the San Diego defense and security giant has cornered  billions of dollars in new contracts from the Defense, Homeland Security and Justice  Departments.

Convera, describing itself as "the leading technology provider of intelligent  search," the Vienna, Virginia corporation claims it is "an established leader in the  business of search technologies." Apparently, the company is less than sanguine about  trumpeting its products for the FBI. A search of their website returned zero hits on  the terms "FBI-IDW."

However, Washington Technology revealed in 2004, Convera won a contract worth more  than $2 million to "provide an agency-wide search and discovery platform for the  FBI."

The contract "covers a perpetual license for the company's RetrievalWare software as  the search technology." The 2004 award was "a follow-on from an earlier contract  worth approximately $1.5 million ... for search and categorization software for the  FBI's Investigative Data Warehouse," the technology insider publication reported.

On the other hand Chiliad avers that they will help "organizations realize the full  business value of all of their disparate information resources," and their innovative  products "in enterprise search and analysis technology, and virtual information  sharing" will "help organizations 'Connect the Dots' and arrive at truly actionable  intelligence." In this spirit, Chiliad boasts that the FBI as the lead agency for  "domestic counterterrorism" has purchased a "worldwide enterprise license to  Chiliad's software."

Founded in 1999, the Washington, D.C.-based firm's customer base include such spooky  corporations as defense giant BAE, Booz Allen Hamilton, described by investigative  journalist Tim Shorrock in Spies For Hire as a "revolving door" connecting the  corporate security world and agencies such as NSA, General Dynamics, ITT, Northrop  Grumman, SAIC and many, many more!

According to EFF, the FBI is busily putting these products to the test.

In addition to storing vast quantities of data, the IDW provides a content  management and data mining system that is designed to permit a wide range of FBI  personnel (investigative, analytical, administrative, and intelligence) to access and  analyze aggregated data from over fifty previously separate datasets included in the  warehouse. Moving forward, the FBI intends to increase its use of the IDW for "link  analysis" (looking for links between suspects and other people--i.e. the Kevin Bacon  game) and to start "pattern analysis" (defining a "predictive pattern of behavior"  and searching for that pattern in the IDW's datasets before any criminal offence is  committed--i.e. pre-crime). (Kurt Opsahl, "Report on the Investigative Data  Warehouse," Electronic Frontier Foundation, April 2009)

Accordingly, EFF revealed that then-Assistant Director for the Counterterrorism  Division, Willie Hulon said in 2004 that the FBI was "introducing advanced analytical  tools" that would "make the most" of IDW data.

Hulon went on to state that when IDW is completed, "Agents, JTTF [Joint Terrorism  Task Force] members and analysts," using the new data-mining technology "will be able  to search rapidly for pictures of known terrorists and match or compare the pictures  with other individuals in minutes rather than days. They will be able to extract  subjects' addresses, phone numbers, and other data in seconds, rather than searching  for it manually. They will have the ability to identify relationships across cases.  They will be able to search up to 100 million pages of international terrorism- related documents in seconds." EFF notes that since 2004, "the number of records has  grown nearly ten-fold."

According to an April 1 press release from the American Civil Liberties Union, FBI  Joint Terrorism Task Forces and the related national nexus of Fusion Centers,  comprised of the FBI, local police, the military (U.S. Northern Command) and private  outfits in the corporate security world, relying heavily on data-mining and link  analysis "have experienced a mission creep in the last several years, becoming more  of a threat than a security device."

Indeed, the ACLU noted that Fusion Centers have routinely targeted activists across the political spectrum, relying on specious data-mining techologies as well as paid  provocateurs and informants (HUMINT) that label any and all government critics as  "extremists" to be monitored and indexed in national security databases. The civil liberties' group averred: "From directing local police to investigate non-violent political activists and religious groups in Texas to advocating surveillance of third-party presidential candidate supporters in Missouri, there have been repeated  and persistent disclosures of troubling memos and reports from local fusions centers."

Since 2004, EFF has identified 38 separate data sources feeding the FBI's  Investigative Data Warehouse. In addition to the FBI's Automated Case System (ACS),  soon to be replaced by the Sentinel Case Management System after the $170 million  "Virtual Case File" fiasco briefly described above, IDW compiles information from the  following sources:

Secure Automated Messaging Network (SAMNet). SAMNet consists of all message traffic  sent by the CIA, Defense Intelligence Agency, including Intelligence Information  Reports (IIRs) and Technical Disseminations (TD) to the FBI. These include Secret  classified information but not those designated Top Secret and above, including  Sensitive Compartmented Information (SCI), the highest security classification.

Joint Intelligence Committee Inquiry (JICI) Documents of "all FBI documents related  to Islamic extremist networks between 1993 and 2002."

Open Source News, collected from the MiTAP system run by San Diego State University. EFF describes MiTAP as a "system that collects raw data from the internet, standardizes the format, extracts named entities, and routes documents into appropriate newsgroups. This dataset is part of the Defense Advanced Research  Projects Agency (DARPA) Translingual Information Detection, Extraction and  Summarization (TIDES) Open Source Data project."

Violent Gang and Terrorist Organization File (VGTOF), provided by the FBI National Crime Information Center (NCIC). It includes "biographical data and photos" of  individuals "who the FBI believes to be associated with violent gangs and terrorism."  However, numerous abuses of the VGTOF classification system have been uncovered by  the ACLU. According to the ACLU of Colorado, the FBI's JTTF added anarchists and eight separate categories of "extremists" to the VGTOF, including "environmental  extremist" and "Black extremist." Indeed, Colorado antiwar activist Bill Sulzman, a campaigner against the weaponization of space, was listed in the VGTOF as a  "terrorist," according to an article in the Colorado Springs Independent.

CIA Intelligence Information Reports (IIR) and Technical Disseminations (TD),  "designed to provide the FBI with the specific results of classified intelligence  collected on internationally-based terrorist suspects and activities, chiefly  abroad."

Eleven IntelPlus scanned document libraries "related to FBI's major terrorism-related  cases."

Eleven Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) Databases.

Selectee List: Copies of a Transportation Security Administration (TSA) "list of  individuals that the TSA believes warrant additional security attention prior to  boarding a commercial airliner."

Terrorist Watch List (TWL): according to EFF, the "FBI Terrorist Watch and Warning  Unit (TWWU) list of names, aliases, and biographical information regarding  individuals submitted to the Terrorist Screening Center (TSC) for inclusion into  VGTOF and TIPOFF watch lists. Also called the Terrorist Screening Database (TSDB),  the database 'contained a total of 724,442 records as of April 30, 2007'." The TWL has ballooned to 1,192,000 names as of May 3, 2009.

According to the ACLU, "members of Congress, nuns, war heroes and other 'suspicious  characters' ... have become trapped in the Kafkaesque clutches of this list, with  little hope of escape." Barry Steinhardt, director of the ACLU Technology and Liberty  Project said last summer: "Putting a million names on a watch list is a guarantee  that the list will do more harm than good by interfering with the travel of innocent  people and wasting huge amounts of our limited security resources on bureaucratic  wheel-spinning. I doubt this thing would even be effective at catching a real  terrorist." While true enough as far as it goes, perhaps the list's true intent is  not to prevent terrorism but rather to terrorize the American people.

At the heart of these systems is data mining, that is, the deployment of a vast  infrastructure capable of receiving, processing, managing and analyzing data flowing  into the system from disparate sources. Indeed, documents released to EFF disclosed  that the Bureau's 2008 budget justification explained that "[t]he Investigative Data  Warehouse (IDW), combined with FTTTF's [Foreign Terrorist Tracking Task Force]  existing applications and business processes, will form the backbone of the NSB's  [National Security Branch] data exploitation system." The FBI also requested  "$11,969,000 ... for the National Security Branch Analysis Center (NSAC)." The FBI  claimed:

Once operational, the NSAC will be tasked to satisfy unmet analytical and  technical needs of the NSB, particularly in the areas of bulk data analysis, pattern analysis, and trend analysis. …The NSAC will provide subject-based "link analysis"  through the utilization of the FBI's collection datasets, combined with public records on predicated subjects. "Link analysis" uses datasets to find links between  subjects, suspects, and addresses or other pieces of relevant information, and other  persons, places, and things. This technique is currently being used on a limited  basis by the FBI; the NSAC will provide improved processes and greater access to this technique to all NSB components. The NSAC will also pursue "pattern analysis" as part  of its service to the NSB. "Pattern analysis" queries take a predictive model or  pattern of behavior and search for that pattern in datasets. The FBI's efforts to  define predictive models and patterns of behavior will improve efforts to identify "sleeper cells."

   
When this request was submitted to Congress, NSAC said it would "bring together  nearly 1.5 billion records created or collected by the FBI and other government  agencies," expected to quadruple by 2012. The House Science and Technology Committee was so alarmed that they demanded that the Government Accountability Office  investigate the National Security Branch Analysis Center.

ABC News' Brian Ross reported that lawmakers are "questioning whether a proposed FBI  anti-terrorist program is worth the price, both in taxpayer dollars and the possible  loss of Americans' privacy."

Noting that the the FBI has a history "of improperly--even illegally--gathering  personal information on Americans, most recently through the widespread abuse of so-called National Security Letters," ABC reported that congressional investigators are demanding to know "whether there are protections in place to make sure all the data in the program was legally collected."

Given the track record of the Bureau when it comes to targeting political opponents,  I wouldn't hold my breath.

Two years later, EFF notes in a letter to Senator Patrick Leahy (D-VT) that the FBI  has refused to release documents filed under the Freedom on Information Act and that  the Bureau "has published neither a 'system of records notice' (as required by the  Privacy Act) nor a 'privacy impact assessment' (as required by the E-Government Act)  for the IDW, thus depriving the public of the kind of accountability that usually  comes with the creation and maintenance of large database systems containing  sensitive personal information."

Citing Leahy's own assertion that the IDW is a "system ripe for abuse," EFF has  called on the Judiciary Committee to examine IDW closely and "provide the public with  needed assurances concerning its potential impact on the privacy rights of citizens."


Anti Fascist Calling



Printer friendly page Print This
If you appreciated this article, please consider making a donation to Axis of Logic. We do not use commercial advertising or corporate funding. We depend solely upon you, the reader, to continue providing quality news and opinion on world affairs.Donate here




Featured
  • Capitalism Is Dying a Natural Death
    Axis of Logic - The curtain is going down on the lone-superpower world we know and it is now a most urgent question if and when and how forces for true democracy, human rights, peace and...
  • A Day of Action Journal
    The student activism yesterday in the "Day of Action" serves as one powerful example of what Civic Revolution is about. Yesterday, March 4, students, teachers, faculty, campus workers and community members are made their voices...
  • Full Moon Over Haiti and Chile
    “The earth had never trembled here, in this soft point of land that leans forward toward the sea: the city is built on spongy soil, that of the coral plain; the region had never known...
AxisofLogic.com© 2003-2010
Fair Use Notice  |   Axis Mission  |  About us  |   Letters/Articles to Editor  | Article Submissions |   Subscribe to Ezine   | RSS Feed  |