Law Enforcement Can Now Scan Multiple Sensitive Databases -- with a Single Click...
RAP SHEETS, WATCHLISTS AND SPY NETWORKS NOW AVAILABLE
WITH SINGLE CLICK
By Aliya Sternstein
November 6, 2014
Law enforcement officials nationwide now have the ability
to search multiple sensitive databases, including spy agency intranets and
homeland security suspicious activity reporting – with a single login.
The breakthrough in interconnectivity is expected to
close information gaps that, among other things, have contributed to the rise
in homegrown terrorism and school shootings.
"Let's say you have a lone-wolf incident or an
active-shooter incident, where you need to be able to securely share
information in a timely way. With a single sign-on capability, there is no
wrong door," Kshemendra Paul, program manager for the Information Sharing
Environment at the Office of Director of National Intelligence, said during an
interview. "If you have an account, you can get to the virtual command
center that the fusion center may be using – in a very direct way."
It took about three years to tear down silos without
eroding privacy controls.
"In many cases, the data sources have different
access requirements – so you can do a federated query that goes across the
multiple sources, but with controlled access," Paul said Thursday.
That means some users still will be blocked from seeing
certain information.
"For example, to access criminal intelligence
information you have to have special training around privacy, civil rights and
civil liberties," Paul said. So, for users without that training, some
search results will be out of reach, he said.
"It's always a balance between sharing and
safeguarding," Paul said. "We are increasing security by introducing
more consistent identity proofing and the ability to enforce policies to
control access to information."
The databases now accessible through a single sign-on
include the Homeland Security Information Network, a key exchange between
state-run intelligence fusion centers and the federal government, as well as
the Justice Department's Regional Information Sharing Systems, which tracks
local crime and gang activity.
Also available are the intelligence community's internal
networks, collectively described as "Intelink," and the FBI's Law
Enforcement Enterprise Portal, the gateway to background check data, facial
recognition tools and other criminal records. The four networks are each
labeled sensitive but unclassified.
Many of the systems are not searchable through a single
query – yet. But that's the next step.
Right now, querying Intelink will retrieve some results
from the law enforcement portal, but it's not possible, for instance, to bring
up hits across all four networks with one search entry.
The new arrangement is expected to save taxpayer money
over the long run. "What we're doing here isn't building something
new," Paul said. "We're interconnecting existing systems. That’s a
really cost-effective way to go."
That streamlining, however, could expedite the flow of
false or protected information that harms innocent people, some privacy
advocates said in reaction on Friday.
“These systems often include unreliable information about
supposedly suspicious activity that is protected by the First Amendment and
entirely innocuous,” American Civil Liberties Union attorney Hugh Handeyside.
“Law enforcement officials have themselves raised privacy concerns about these
systems. Making that information available to more people, with greater ease,
erodes our privacy while doing nothing to make us safer.”
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