| Today, Attorney General John
Ashcroft, Secretary of Homeland Security Tom Ridge, Secretary of
State Colin Powell, FBI Director Robert Mueller, and Director of
Central Intelligence George Tenet announced the creation of the
Terrorist Screening Center (TSC) to consolidate terrorist watchlists
and provide 24/7 operational support for thousands of Federal screeners
across the country and around the world. The TSC will ensure that
America's government screeners are working from the same unified
set of anti-terrorist information HBC comprehensive anti-terrorist
list when a suspected terrorist is screened or stopped anywhere
in the Federal system.
* Better Informed: The TSC will allow federal, state, and local
officials to make better-informed decisions to protect the United
States from terrorist attacks. For example, better access to information
will make it easier for a consular officer posted in another country
to determine whether to grant a visa, or an immigration official
at a U.S. airport to decide whether a person is eligible to enter
the United States.
* Building Capabilities: Creation of the TSC marks another significant
step forward in the President's strategy to protect America's communities
and families by detecting, disrupting, and disabling terrorist threats.
The TSC builds on improvements to U.S. watchlist capabilities that
began in 2001, immediately following the September 11 attacks, including,
most recently, the President's creation of the Terrorist Threat
Integration Center (TTIC).
* Consolidating Information: The TSC will receive the vast majority
of its information about known or suspected terrorists from the
TTIC after TTIC has assembled and analyzed that information from
a wide range of sources. In addition, the FBI will provide the TSC
with information about purely domestic terrorism, i.e., having no
connection to international terrorist activities. The TSC will consolidate
this information into an unclassified terrorist screening database
and make the database accessible to queries for federal, state,
and local agencies for a variety of screening purposes.
* The TSC, through the participation of the Department of Homeland
Security, Department of Justice, Department of State, and Intelligence
Community representatives, will determine which information in the
Database will be available for which types of screening.
* For example, The Attorney General's and the Secretary of Homeland
Security's representatives to the TSC will decide which persons
to include in those records that may be queried directly by law
enforcement officials through the NCIC database. Similarly, the
State Department representative, consulting with the Department
of Justice, Department of Homeland Security, and Intelligence Community
representatives, will determine which information may be screened
by foreign governments.
* Safeguarding Information: The TSC will not independently collect
any information on U.S. citizens. In fact, the TSC does not collect
information at all - it only receives information provided by the
TTIC and the FBI. The TTIC will provide to the TSC all appropriate
and necessary information connected to international terrorism about
any individuals - U.S. citizens or not - that TTIC partner agencies
hold pursuant to their own authorities and the FBI will provide
to the TSC appropriate and necessary information concerning domestic
terrorism, regardless of whether it involves U.S. citizens. If the
TSC receives information on U.S. citizens connected with terrorism,
its use of that information is subject to the same legal limitations
to which it would be subject if the information were not included
in the Database. Purely domestic terrorism information will not
go through TTIC, but will be placed directly into the TSC Database
by the FBI. The Attorney General has been directed to implement
procedures and safeguards with respect to information about U.S.
persons, in coordination with the Secretary of State, the Secretary
of Homeland Security, and the Director of Central Intelligence.
* The creation of the TSC does not provide any new law enforcement
or collection powers to any government official; it simply consolidates
information that law enforcement, the Intelligence Community, the
State Department, and others already possess and makes it accessible
for query to those who need it - federal security screeners, State
and local law enforcement officers, and others. The TSC will have
no independent authority to conduct intelligence collection or other
operations.
* All information the TSC maintains will have been collected in
accordance with existing law, and TSC officials will continue to
be bound by any applicable laws and constitutional requirements
that restrict the use of that information and that protect privacy
interests and other liberties.
* Information technology and information handling procedures will
be designed to comply with constitutional and other legal requirements,
and participants will continue to be answerable both to internal
agency oversight and congressional oversight.
* Supporting the Mission: The Federal Bureau of Investigation ("FBI")
will administer the TSC. The Department of Homeland Security, the
Department of State, and others will coordinate with and assign
operational and staff support to the TSC.
* The FBI is the appropriate administrator of the TSC's start-up
operations because of the Bureau's technical experience in watchlist
integration. Although the FBI will administer the TSC, the TSC will
be an interagency effort. As noted, the Departments of Homeland
Security and State and others will coordinate with and assign operational
and staff support to the TSC. The Principal Deputy Director of the
TSC will be a Department of Homeland Security official. In addition
to the Department of Justice, the Department of State, and the Department
of Homeland Security, the Intelligence Community and other federal
agencies will assign representatives to the TSC. Each of these agencies
will be responsible for specific aspects of the TSC's work.
The TSC is being phased in via a coordinated interagency effort
administered by the FBI and will be operational by December 1, 2003.
Source: Department of Homeland Security
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