By Mimi Hall, USA TODAY
Foreigners coming to the USA will soon be required to have 10
fingerprints scanned as part of a new government anti-terrorist effort,
the Homeland Security Department says.
The plan for Customs officers to collect more biometric information
from foreigners is one phase of a long-awaited upgrade to a
border-security program put in place after 9/11. The security program,
known as US-VISIT, aims to give government agents a better idea of who
is coming into the country and catch people with forged passports. The
government so far has spent $1.7 billion on the program.
Foreigners were previously required to get just two of their prints
scanned when they arrived at a checkpoint. Upgrading the system to 10
fingerprints will enable more thorough checking against terrorist watch
lists and databases of criminals and illegal immigrants.
"Biometrics can be a game-changer," Homeland Security spokesman Russ
Knocke says. "They represent what terrorists fear most — an increased
likelihood of getting caught."
Ten-print scanning will begin this week at Washington Dulles
International Airport in Virginia. By March, nine more major airports
will join the program. Homeland Security says it will be in place at
every airport in the USA by the end of 2008. It also will be phased in
at land borders and seaports. About 35 million travelers a year could
be affected, says Rick Webster of the Travel Industry Association of
America.
Privacy groups question whether the Homeland Security Department, which
the Government Accountability Office has criticized for poor handling
of personal information, can properly secure a huge fingerprint
database. "There are always questions when information is gathered as
to how it will be used and who will have access to it," says Melissa
Ngo of the Electronic Privacy Information Center.
The department has been collecting index-finger prints from foreign
visitors since 2004 in an effort to make sure they aren't coming in
with forged passports. It now has 90 million sets of prints.
Collecting 10 prints also will allow officials to more easily compare
the prints with those collected overseas by other government agencies
such as the Defense Department, in war zones, at crime scenes and from
places where suspected terrorists congregate.
Having more prints will mean fewer foreign travelers being pulled aside
for additional checks, says Bob Mocny, director of US-VISIT, which
stands for U.S. Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology.
Mexicans who use government-issued border-crossing cards and most
Canadians are exempt from US-VISIT. People older than 79 and children
younger than 14 also do not have to be fingerprinted.
An average of 70 people a day were stopped unnecessarily in 2004 — the
most recent data available — because their index prints matched a
suspicious print, Mocny says. Having more prints should eliminate most
of those false positives, he says.
Webster of the travel industry group says that's a plus. "You need more
scans to separate legitimate travelers from people of concern," he says.
Mocny dismisses privacy concerns. "We haven't had one breach of
security or privacy," he says.
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Customs to collect full sets of visitors' prints
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