FBI Data Mining Program Raises
Eyebrows in Congress
The Blotter | June 13, 2007
By Justin Rood
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.
The National Security Analysis
Center (NSAC) would bring together nearly 1.5 billion records
created or collected by the FBI and other government agencies, a
figure the FBI expects to quadruple in coming years, according to an
unclassified FBI budget document obtained by the Blotter on
ABCNews.com.
Those numbers alone raised
concerns from two congressmen, Reps. Brad Miller, D-Calif., and
James Sensenbrenner, Jr., R-Wisc., the chair and ranking member of
the oversight panel of the House Science and Technology Committee.
The FBI has a track record of
improperly -- even illegally -- gathering personal information on
Americans, most recently through the widespread abuse of so-called
National Security Letters, the two men noted in a letter to
Congress' investigative body, the Government Accountability Office.
Miller and Sensenbrenner asked GAO
to determine whether the NSAC will include records on U.S. citizens,
and whether there are protections in place to make sure all the data
in the program was legally collected.
Of further concern to the two
congressmen are the FBI's stated hopes to "pro-actively" mine the
data to find terrorists using "predictive" analysis, according to
its budget request, an unproven method according to experts and even
the U.S. intelligence chief's office.
In theory, predictive analysis
involves mapping a known pattern of terrorist behavior -- for
instance, the sequence and timing of such mundane activities as bank
transactions and travel purchases -- against a massive collection of
such records like the NSAC databases. If an individual's actions
match the pattern, they can be considered a suspect, even if they
have no known ties to any suspected terrorists or known terrorist
groups.
Such a method would help identify
"sleeper cells," the FBI claims in its request -- secret groups of
terrorists living innocuously within the United States, waiting for
a signal from a terrorist group leader to assemble and strike.
But to date the approach has not
proven workable. So far, terrorism researchers "cannot readily
distinguish the absolute scale of normal behaviors" for terrorists
or ordinary Americans, conceded a 2006 document from the Office of
the Director of National Intelligence and obtained by National
Journal magazine. In other words, no one can figure out how
terrorists act differently from normal Americans.
"We had no idea how on God's earth
you would characterize and capture normal behavior," a former
researcher for the ill-fated Total Information Awareness (TIA)
program told the magazine last October.
TIA, the government's first
attempt at anti-terrorism data mining on a massive scale, had its
funding stripped by Congress over widespread concerns it would
violate privacy laws. The National Security Agency -- arguably a
more tech-savvy outfit than the FBI, whose computer woes are
legendary -- continues to pour millions into data mining research.
The FBI has requested $12 million
for its NSAC project. That amount would pay for 90,000 square feet
of space and an additional 53 employees, according to its budget
request. Whether Congress will approve the funds has yet to be
determined.
The bureau did not respond to a
request for comment.
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