Kevin Johnson
USA TODAY
June 4, 2008
WASHINGTON — State and local police officers fail to notify federal authorities about encounters with possible terrorism suspects up to 10 times a day, a senior FBI official said.
The rate of failure represents missed opportunities to verify possible matches to suspects on the government’s terrorist watch list or to remove individuals from the list whose names had been added by mistake, Leonard Boyle, director of the bureau’s Terrorist Screening Center (TSC), said in an interview.
Police are asked to contact the center when routine computerized background checks on individuals — who may have violated traffic rules or been involved in a domestic disturbance — trigger electronic alerts from the TSC.
The alerts indicate possible matches to individuals on the government’s watch list of an estimated 400,000 people. Police notifications to the center result in the identification of 40 to 50 verified suspects each day.
Of those, Boyle said, a handful result in arrests.
Regular audits of the system reveal that officers do not respond to the alerts eight to 10 times daily. Federal authorities are not automatically contacted. As a result, Boyle said, they are forced to reconstruct the encounters through interviews and local police reports.
The government does not track the rate at which valid watch-list suspects are identified when the initial contacts go unreported, but Boyle said it is fairly common for the unreported encounters to result later in positive identifications of watch-list suspects. There is no evidence that a local reporting failure resulted in a terrorist act in the USA.
| WATCH ALEX JONES’ ENDGAME ONLINE NOW in its entirety. View more High quality trailers at www.endgamethemovie.com |
Print this page.
Comments are closed.
© 2012 Infowars.com is a Free Speech Systems, LLC company. All rights reserved. Digital Millennium Copyright Act Notice.
