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Despite IT advances, terrorism info sharing still a problem for states

Some state homeland security directors say information isn't reaching frontline officials

July 25, 2003 12:00 PM ET

Computerworld - WASHINGTON -- A host of federal homeland security officials testified on Capitol Hill this week that the government's IT-enabled reorganization, with the Department of Homeland Security as its centerpiece, has significantly improved terrorism information sharing since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
But some state homeland security officials told a far different story in written testimony submitted during a July 24 hearing of the House Select Committee on Homeland Security. While the federal government should be applauded for efforts to improve information flow, state officials said, a lot of critical data is still not finding its way to the nation's first responders -- state and local police, fire and medical officials.
Critical intelligence information produced by and fed into the various Joint Terrorism Task Forces (JTTF) around the country often doesn't reach the officers responsible for patrolling cities, towns, highways, villages and neighborhoods, according to James Kallstrom, senior adviser for counterterrorism to New York Gov. George Pataki.
Having already deployed a 350-node counterterrorism network throughout the state, New York next month plans to activate a new counterterrorism center to serve as a central clearinghouse for federal, state and local information sharing. But the federal government must still give police officers on patrol the ability to conduct a comprehensive search of federal databases, including outstanding warrants and terrorist watch lists, Kallstrom told members of Congress.
Federal security policy obstacles, such as disparate security clearance policies, have often hampered the ability of state officials to gain access to databases. "Currently, a top-secret clearance issued by the Department of Defense may not be recognized or deemed comparable by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, thus halting the flow of vital and often timely intelligence," wrote Kallstrom.
Kallstrom's testimony coincides with the findings of the joint inquiry by the House and Senate Select Committees on Intelligence into the 9/11 attacks. The 900-page report was released yesterday (see story). It cited similar complaints by many chiefs of police around the country but also noted improvements, such as the investigation of Zacharias Moussaoui, the alleged 20th hijacker.
In that case, the Minneapolis JTTF was able to search an Immigration and Naturalization Service database to quickly determine Moussaoui's illegal immigration status, which led to his arrest.
George Foresman, deputy assistant for emergency preparedness to Virginia Gov. Mark Warner, painted a much more disorganized picture of the federal government's homeland security structure and information-sharing mechanisms. According to Foresman, there are no clear business rules in place governing how information should be shared, and the quality of the data is



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