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Terror
Database Has Quadrupled In Four Years
Washington Post | March 25, 2007
By
Karen DeYoung
Each day, thousands of pieces of
intelligence information from around the world -- field reports,
captured documents, news from foreign allies and sometimes idle
gossip -- arrive in a computer-filled office in McLean, where
analysts feed them into the nation's central list of terrorists and
terrorism suspects.
Called TIDE, for Terrorist
Identities Datamart Environment, the list is a storehouse for data
about individuals that the intelligence community believes might
harm the United States. It is the wellspring for watch lists
distributed to airlines, law enforcement, border posts and U.S.
consulates, created to close one of the key intelligence gaps
revealed after Sept. 11, 2001: the failure of federal agencies to
share what they knew about al-Qaeda operatives.
But in addressing one problem,
TIDE has spawned others. Ballooning from fewer than 100,000 files in
2003 to about 435,000, the growing database threatens to overwhelm
the people who manage it. "The single biggest worry that I have is
long-term quality control," said Russ Travers, in charge of TIDE at
the National Counterterrorism Center in McLean. "Where am I going to
be, where is my successor going to be, five years down the road?"
TIDE has also created concerns
about secrecy, errors and privacy. The list marks the first time
foreigners and U.S. citizens are combined in an intelligence
database. The bar for inclusion is low, and once someone is on the
list, it is virtually impossible to get off it. At any stage, the
process can lead to "horror stories" of mixed-up names and
unconfirmed information, Travers acknowledged.
The watch lists fed by TIDE, used
to monitor everyone entering the country or having even a casual
encounter with federal, state and local law enforcement, have a
higher bar. But they have become a source of irritation -- and
potentially more serious consequences -- for many U.S. citizens and
visitors.
In 2004 and 2005,
misidentifications accounted for about half of the tens of thousands
of times a traveler's name triggered a watch-list hit, the
Government Accountability Office reported in September.
Congressional committees have criticized the process, some charging
that it collects too much information about Americans, others saying
it is ineffective against terrorists. Civil rights and privacy
groups have called for increased transparency.
"How many are on the lists, how
are they compiled, how is the information used, how do they verify
it?" asked Lillie Coney, associate director of the Washington-based
Electronic Privacy Information Center. Such information is
classified, and individuals barred from traveling are not told why.
Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) said
last year that his wife had been delayed repeatedly while airlines
queried whether Catherine Stevens was the watch-listed Cat Stevens.
The listing referred to the Britain-based pop singer who converted
to Islam and changed his name to Yusuf Islam. The reason Islam is
not allowed to fly to the United States is secret.
So is the reason Maher Arar, a
Syrian-born Canadian, remains on the State Department's consular
watch list. Detained in New York while en route to Montreal in 2002,
Arar was sent by the U.S. government to a year of imprisonment in
Syria. Canada, the source of the initial information about Arar,
cleared him of all terrorism allegations last September -- three
years after his release -- and has since authorized $9 million in
compensation.
TIDE is a vacuum cleaner for both
proven and unproven information, and its managers disclaim
responsibility for how other agencies use the data. "What's the
alternative?" Travers said. "I work under the assumption that we're
never going to have perfect information -- fingerprints, DNA -- on 6
billion people across the planet. . . . If someone actually has a
better idea, I'm all ears."
'Thousands of Messages'
The electronic journey a piece of
terrorism data takes from an intelligence outpost to an airline
counter is interrupted at several points for analysis and
condensation.
President Bush ordered the
intelligence community in 2003 to centralize data on terrorism
suspects, and U.S. agencies at home and abroad now send everything
they collect to TIDE. It arrives electronically as names to be added
or as additional information about people already in the system.
The 80 TIDE analysts get
"thousands of messages a day," Travers said, much of the data
"fragmentary," "inconsistent" and "sometimes just flat-out wrong."
Often the analysts go back to the intelligence agencies for details.
"Sometimes you'll get sort of corroborating information," he said,
"but many times you're not going to get much. What we use here,
rightly or wrongly, is a reasonable-suspicion standard."
Each TIDE listee is given a
number, and statistics are kept on nationality and ethnic and
religious groups. Some files include aliases and sightings, and
others are just a full or partial name, perhaps with a sketchy
biography. Sunni and Shiite Muslims are the fastest-growing
categories in a database whose entries include Saudi financiers and
Colombian revolutionaries. U.S. citizens -- who Travers said make up
less than 5 percent of listings -- are included if an "international
terrorism nexus" is established. A similar exception for the
administration's warrantless wiretap program came under court
challenge from privacy and civil rights advocates.
Information Sharing
Every night at 10, TIDE dumps an
unclassified version of that day's harvest -- names, dates of birth,
countries of origin and passport information -- into a database
belonging to the FBI's Terrorist Screening Center. TIDE's most
sensitive information is not included. The FBI adds data about U.S.
suspects with no international ties for a combined daily total of
1,000 to 1,500 new names.
Between 5 and 6 a.m., a shift of
24 analysts drawn from the agencies that use watch lists begins a
new winnowing process at the center's Crystal City office. The
analysts have access to case files at TIDE and the original
intelligence sources, said the center's acting director, Rick Kopel.
Decisions on what to add to the
Terrorist Screening Center master list are made by midafternoon. The
bar is higher than TIDE's; total listings were about 235,000 names
as of last fall, according to Justice Department Inspector General
Glenn A. Fine. The bar is then raised again as agencies decide which
names to put on their own watch lists: the Transportation Security
Administration's "no-fly" and "selectee" lists for airlines;
Consular Lookout and Support System at the State Department; the
Interagency Border and Inspection System at the Department of
Homeland Security; and the Justice Department's National Crime
Information Center. The criteria each agency use are classified,
Kopel said.
Some information may raise a red
flag for one agency but not another. "There's a big difference
between CLASS and no-fly," Kopel said, referring to State's consular
list. "About the only criteria CLASS has is that you're not a U.S.
person. . . . Say 'a Mohammed from Syria.' That's useless for me to
watch-list here in the United States. But if I'm in Damascus
processing visas . . . that might be enough for someone to . . . put
a hold on the visa process."
All of the more than 30,000
individuals on the TSA's no-fly list are prohibited from entering an
aircraft in the United States. People whose names appear on the
longer selectee list -- those the government believes merit watching
but does not bar from travel -- are supposed to be subjected to more
intense scrutiny.
With little to go on beyond names,
airlines find frequent matches. The screening center agent on call
will check the file for markers such as sex, age and prior
"encounters" with the list. The agent might ask the airlines about
the passenger's eye color, height or defining marks, Kopel said.
"We'll say, 'Does he have any rings on his left hand?' and they'll
say, 'Uh, he doesn't have a left hand.' Okay. We know that [the
listed person] lost his left hand making a bomb."
If the answers indicate a match,
that "encounter" is fed back into the FBI screening center's files
and ultimately to TIDE. Kopel said the agent never tells the airline
whether the person trying to board is the suspect. The airlines
decide whether to allow the customer to fly.
TSA receives thousands of
complaints each year, such as this one released to the Electronic
Privacy Information Center in 2004 under the Freedom of Information
Act: "Apparently, my name is on some watch list because everytime I
fly, I get delayed while the airline personnel call what they say is
TSA," wrote a passenger whose name was blacked out. Noting that he
was a high-level federal worker, he asked what he could do to remove
his name from the list.
The answer, Kopel said, is little.
A unit at the screening center responds to complaints, he said, but
will not remove a name if it is shared by a terrorism suspect.
Instead, people not on the list who share a name with someone listed
can be issued letters instructing airline personnel to check with
the TSA to verify their identity. The GAO reported that 31 names
were removed in 2005.
A Process Under Fire
A recent review of the entire
Terrorist Screening Center database was temporarily abandoned when
it proved too much work even for the night crew, which generally
handles less of a workload. But the no-fly and selectee lists are
being scrubbed to emphasize "people we think are a danger to the
plane, and not for some other reason they met the criteria," Kopel
said.
A separate TSA system that would
check every passenger name against the screening center's database
has been shelved over concern that it could grow into a massive
surveillance program. The Department of Homeland Security was
rebuked by Congress in December for trying to develop a
risk-assessment program to profile travelers entering and leaving
the United States based on airline and financial data.
Kopel insisted that private
information on Americans, such as credit-card records, never makes
it into the screening center database and that "we rely 100 percent
on government-owned information."
The center came in for ridicule
last year when CBS's "60 Minutes" noted that 14 of the 19 Sept. 11
hijackers were listed -- five years after their deaths. Kopel
defended the listings, saying that "we know for a fact that these
people will use names that they believe we are not going to list
because they're out of circulation -- either because they're dead or
incarcerated. . . . It's not willy-nilly. Every name on the list,
there's a reason that it's on there."
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