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piccadilly
Feds to collect DNA from every person they arrest


By EILEEN SULLIVAN, Associated Press Writer Wed Apr 16, 7:39 PM ET

WASHINGTON - The government plans to begin collecting DNA samples from anyone arrested by a federal law enforcement agency — a move intended to prevent violent crime but which also is raising concerns about the privacy of innocent people.


Using authority granted by Congress, the government also plans to collect DNA samples from foreigners who are detained, whether they have been charged or not. The DNA would be collected through a cheek swab, Justice Department spokesman Erik Ablin said Wednesday. That would be a departure from current practice, which limits DNA collection to convicted felons.

Expanding the DNA database, known as CODIS, raises civil liberties questions about the potential for misuse of such personal information, such as family ties and genetic conditions.

Ablin said the DNA collection would be subject to the same privacy laws applied to current DNA sampling. That means none of it would be used for identifying genetic traits, diseases or disorders.

Congress gave the Justice Department the authority to expand DNA collection in two different laws passed in 2005 and 2006.

There are dozens of federal law enforcement agencies, ranging from the FBI to the Library of Congress Police. The federal government estimates it makes about 140,000 arrests each year.

Justice officials estimate the new collecting requirements would add DNA from an additional 1.2 million people to the database each year.

Those who support the expanded collection believe that DNA sampling could get violent criminals off the streets and prevent them from committing more crimes.

A Chicago study in 2005 found that 53 murders and rapes could have been prevented if a DNA sample had been collected upon arrest.

"Many innocent lives could have been saved had the government began this kind of DNA sampling in the 1990s when the technology to do so first became available," Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., said. Kyl sponsored the 2005 law that gave the Justice Department this authority.

Thirteen states (ALREADY!) have similar laws: Alaska, Arizona, California, Kansas, Louisiana, Maryland, Minnesota, New Mexico, North Dakota, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia.


The new regulation would mean that the federal government could store DNA samples of people who are not guilty of any crime,
said Jesselyn McCurdy, legislative counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union.

"Now innocent people's DNA will be put into this huge CODIS database, and it will be very difficult for them to get it out if they are not charged or convicted of a crime," McCurdy said.

If a person is arrested but not convicted, he or she can ask the Justice Department to destroy the sample.

The Homeland Security Department — the federal agency charged with policing immigration — supports the new rule.

"DNA is a proven law-enforcement tool," DHS spokesman Russ Knocke said.

The rule would not allow for DNA samples to be collected from immigrants who are legally in the United States or those being processed for admission, unless the person was arrested.

The proposed rule is being published in the Federal Register. That will be followed by a 30-day comment period.

-------------------


And HOW does collecting DNA prevents crimes from being committed ?
graham4anything
We are living in a police state
A dictatorship already

However, people think it has to look 100% like past police states otherwise it isn't
Just like the coming depression

don't bother, it's here already

rights?
We don't got no stinkin' rights.

(odd thing is how Bush41 used the dreaded rights of the ACLU to weasel out of Iran/Contra though...one of the great unsaid ironies of history when Oliver North was freed because of the ACLU).

too bad nothing was done in 1993 when Bill came into office to avenge that.
Once that was ignored, there is now no turning back from the horrors that are already here, and the worse ones coming

Get your passports ready, because you are going to need that and some spare bribe money to get out before its too late

(but it is already too late.)

(but they will tell you Don't worry, be happy, Don't worry, be happy" Life is great and jolly (jolly ollie?)

was there any bigger irony ever than North using the ACLU to worm his way out of his illegal crimes against the constitution?
veritas
QUOTE(picadilly @ Apr 17 2008, 05:41 AM) *
Feds to collect DNA from every person they arrest
By EILEEN SULLIVAN, Associated Press Writer Wed Apr 16, 7:39 PM ET

WASHINGTON - The government plans to begin collecting DNA samples from anyone arrested by a federal law enforcement agency — a move intended to prevent violent crime but which also is raising concerns about the privacy of innocent people.
Using authority granted by Congress, the government also plans to collect DNA samples from foreigners who are detained, whether they have been charged or not...

...There are dozens of federal law enforcement agencies, ranging from the FBI to the Library of Congress Police. The federal government estimates it makes about 140,000 arrests each year.
Justice officials estimate the new collecting requirements would add DNA from an additional 1.2 million people to the database each year...
-------------------

And HOW does collecting DNA prevents crimes from being committed ?


That's easy. Consider the repeat offender who is arrested/released with or without conviction, then commits several additional crimes (similar or escalating), leaving DNA, but avoiding detection, before committing one of the crimes in the Chicago group of 53. Had offender been incarcerated for one of those earlier crimes on basis of DNA match, group of 53 would have been prevented @ the very least in the time frame studied. What I don't understand is why DNA samples are being restricted to only federal law enforcement arrests, and how 140,000 arrests per year translates into 1.2 million additions to the database per year. Does that imply one million samples from 'foreigners, whether they have been charged or not'? Iffy, at best.

Legitimate law enforcement tools have my support.
piccadilly
QUOTE(veritas @ Apr 17 2008, 07:49 AM) *
Had offender been incarcerated for one of those earlier crimes on basis of DNA match, group of 53 would have been prevented @ the very least in the time frame studied.

Had ONE offender ? murdered 53 times ?

Would have hit the news.
graham4anything
you would think this story would be important

not the trash from the debate

But that's America in 2008.

Most people won't even know this story (like Bush admitting he ok'd the torture and knew) exists.

shameful. We really get what we deserve.
NiteOwl
I'm surprised they aren't collecting DNA samples from newborns at birth and starting a national DNA database...

Hmmmm... maybe they have. Who would know. ninja.gif
Terra
With so many people apparently being incarcerated who are legitimately innocent, this might not be a bad idea. Look how many people have been released in the past 5-7 years as DNA processing became so much more advanced. I'm under no illusion that the only people in prison and probably even on death row are guilty. It would seem that some form of this would certainly help those falsely convicted - with the right guidelines for the results to be used.

Since the majority of prison population is of some color other than white, it also seems the right thing to do. I don't believe there should be another execution on death row until something along these lines is initiated.

Everyone was in a tizzy years ago when HIV testing became a routine blood test when you were admitted to the hospital. None of the exaggerated scenarios came to pass - and it's worked well.
veritas
QUOTE(picadilly @ Apr 17 2008, 10:55 AM) *
Had ONE offender ? murdered 53 times ?

Would have hit the news.

Obviously not - sorry the shorthand was confusing to you (I much prefer reading to typing).
QUOTE
- Consider
the repeat offender
who is arrested/released with or without conviction,
then commits several additional crimes (similar or escalating), leaving DNA, but avoiding detection, (here's the disrupt point)
before committing one of the crimes in the Chicago group of 53.


Thanks for the original post and others. We disagree on this one.
piccadilly
QUOTE(veritas @ Apr 17 2008, 11:15 AM) *
QUOTE

- Consider
the repeat offender
who is arrested/released with or without conviction,
then commits several additional crimes (similar or escalating), leaving DNA, but avoiding detection, (here's the disrupt point)
before committing one of the crimes in the Chicago group of 53.

Thanks for the original post and others. We disagree on this one.

We disagree because it doesn't make sense to me.
Exactly how was that group of 53 murders constituted ?
Now THAT's the interesting part that is carefully avoided.

But the article is written as to serve as propaganda.
What I hinted at was the fallacy deliberately constituted by the language abuse, applying the word "prevent" to "crime" as to sell to the public general DNA collection as some kind of insurance against crime.

"Preventing" crime starts by answering the question "Why do people commit crimes ?" and solving those causes that lead people into committing crimes.
Certainly, general DNA collection addresses none of these causes.
veritas
From the Bill Of Rights Defense Committee website (illustrating how traditional liberal v. conservative categories are scrambled, hence, defunct) -
http://bordc.org/news/

QUOTE
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/conte...8042002388.html
From DNA of Family, a Tool to Make Arrests
Privacy Advocates Say the Emerging Practice Turns Relatives Into Genetic Informants

By Ellen Nakashima
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, April 21, 2008; A01


He was a church-going father of two, and for more than 30 years Dennis Rader eluded police in the Wichita area, killing 10 people and signing taunting letters with a self-styled monogram: BTK, for Bind Torture Kill. In the end, it was a DNA sample that tied BTK to his crimes. Not his own DNA. But his daughter's.

Investigators obtained a court order without the daughter's knowledge for a Pap smear specimen she had given five years earlier at a university medical clinic in Kansas. A DNA profile of the specimen almost perfectly matched the DNA evidence taken from several BTK crime scenes, leading detectives to conclude she was the child of the killer. That allowed police to secure an arrest warrant in February 2005 and end BTK's murderous career.

The BTK case was an early use of an emerging tool in law enforcement: analyzing the DNA of a suspect's relatives. In the BTK example, police had a suspect and were looking to tie him to the crime. But now, states are moving to conduct familial searches of criminal databases, looking for close-to-perfect matches with DNA from crime scenes. A partial match with a convicted criminal could implicate a brother or daughter or father of the convict. Such searches, advocates say, constitute a powerful law enforcement tool that, experts say, could increase by 40 percent the number of suspects identified through DNA.

As things stand in some states, lab analysts who discover a potential suspect in this way may not be permitted to share that information with investigators. Such a policy, said William Fitzpatrick, a New York state district attorney, "is insanity. It's disgraceful. If I've got something of scientific value that I can't share because of imaginary privacy concerns, it's crazy. That's how we solve crimes."

But the technique is arousing fierce objections from privacy advocates, who maintain that it turns family members into genetic informants without their knowledge or consent. They complain that it takes material collected for one purpose and uses it for another. And with the nation's DNA database disproportionately comprised of minority offenders, they say, it amounts to placing a class of Americans under greater scrutiny merely because their relatives have committed crimes.

"If practiced routinely, we would be subjecting hundreds of thousands of innocent people who happen to be relatives of individuals in the FBI database to lifelong genetic surveillance," said Tania Simoncelli, science adviser to the American Civil Liberties Union.

Nonetheless, California, which maintains the world's third-largest criminal DNA database with more than 1 million samples, will soon become the first state to adopt a protocol to allow for familial searches. Last week, Colorado performed a test run of familial search software on its criminal database. In Massachusetts, officials say they plan to develop a policy to allow familial searches.

The technique is being adopted as states and the federal government expand their databanks to include profiles of people who have been arrested but not convicted of certain crimes.

Only Maryland has expressly banned familial searching in a law adopted this month to expand its DNA database to include anyone charged with a violent crime. The FBI, which maintains the world's largest forensic DNA database with almost 6 million profiles, said it has so far refrained from adopting the technique because of concerns about constitutional challenges.

"The FBI would be more comfortable with congressional authorization to conduct familial searches," said Thomas Callaghan, head of the FBI's national DNA database.

However, he said, the bureau does occasionally find partial matches. When it does, under an interim policy, it allows states to follow up to see whether a relative is involved.

An advisory group to the FBI has proposed a final policy that goes further, recommending that partial matches be subjected to additional DNA testing and statistical analysis that would help investigators home in on relatives of people in the federal database.

"How is that not familial searching?" said Simoncelli of the ACLU. "You're still using the database to try to get to family members."

The key is intent, Callaghan said. The bureau is "not deliberately trolling the database looking for relatives," he said.

Heightening privacy concerns are the growing number of local jurisdictions that maintain DNA databases not restricted to criminals. Some include the DNA of victims, suspects or even lab workers. Such collections, which critics call "rogue databases," are barred from inclusion in state and national databases, but rules about their use by law enforcement agencies are unclear.

The Supreme Court has repeatedly held that authorities may not conduct searches for general law enforcement purposes without suspicion about individuals. Although convicted criminals have a diminished expectation of privacy, searching a database for unknown relatives might violate that principle, said Jeffrey Rosen, a George Washington University law professor.

"The idea of holding people responsible for who they are rather than what they've done could challenge deep American principles of privacy and equality," he said. "Although the legal issues aren't clear, the moral ones are vexing."

Finding BTK

BTK first struck in 1974, strangling a man, his wife and their two children, 11 and 9, in their home. He killed six more times over the next 17 years, tying up his prey with electrical tape, nylon stockings and rope.

After 14 years of silence, BTK reemerged in 2004, sending messages to authorities via the media hinting that he was about to strike again. Computer forensics revealed that a document on a CD sent to a local television station had been saved by a person named "Dennis" at a local church.

Investigators zeroed in on Dennis Rader, the congregation president, but before they moved, they wanted evidence tying him to the crimes.

They learned that Rader had a daughter who had attended Kansas State University, and they reasoned that at some point she must have used the medical clinic, said Wichita police Lt. Ken Landwehr. "It was suggested that she probably had a Pap smear," he said. Federal law requires that labs keep Pap smears for five years, principally in case of legal challenges over diagnoses.

The prosecutors obtained a subpoena and a court order for the daughter's specimen to compare with BTK's DNA. (An exemption in the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act allows law enforcement to obtain a student's health data with a court order.)

"It was obviously good detective work," said Nola Tedesco Foulston, the prosecutor in the case.

At the same time, said George Washington University law professor Sonia Suter, "it is so troubling to think that somebody would have a sample taken for her medical welfare that is then used to implicate her father."

To Phyllis Hedge, daughter-in-law of a BTK victim, it is justified by the need to stop violent criminals. Her mother-in-law, Marine Hedge, was stalked and strangled by BTK in 1985. Twenty years later, Hedge said, she and her husband, Tommy, were stunned and elated to see on television a picture of her mother-in-law with news of BTK's arrest. In 2005, Rader was sentenced to 10 consecutive life terms.

"Whatever it takes to catch these people who do these atrocities, who have no respect for human life, whatever it takes to get them, is totally appropriate. . . . I'm grateful to [Kerri Rader]," she said.

Landwehr said he spoke with Kerri after her father had been arrested and that "she had no problem" with the use of her Pap smear. "What we had to do, we had to do," he said. "She understands that." Through her husband, Kerri Rader declined to comment.

Matching the Markers

To match DNA from tissue samples -- skin left under fingernails, semen on a car seat, saliva traces on a water glass -- forensic scientists examine the information contained at 13 locations on the human genome. Two genetic markers -- one from each parent -- are scrutinized at each of those locations, creating a profile of an individual that can be compared against a database of criminals. A match on all 26 markers -- called alleles -- is a perfect hit, indicating the samples come from the same person. A match on at least 16 alleles, especially if they involve a rare one, could indicate that a close relative left a sample, experts said.

"It's an extremely powerful tool," said Mitch Morrissey, Denver District Attorney. Not using it would be a wasted opportunity, he said. "It's like you build a Porsche and you drive it like a Pinto."

But one area that has civil libertarians greatly concerned is the potential to apply the technique to local databases unregulated by the stringent rules that apply to the national database and its state counterparts. Last September, Denver conducted the first test in the United States of familial searching software on a DNA database, using the county's databank of 1,700 profiles. Along with profiles from suspects, it also included lab employees and people who allowed their DNA to be taken to eliminate them as suspects. The people who were not suspects signed waivers, Morrissey said, allowing their DNA profiles to be used for research.

The test yielded three partial matches that, with additional testing and analysis, reflected a 90 percent likelihood relatives were involved -- one between a convicted felon and his brother, a rapist, and another between a prison inmate and his son, a burglar.

The third match linked a rape case suspect with the DNA profile of a lab employee. The suspect, it turned out, was the employee's brother. When investigators followed up, they found the case had been closed. "So there was no reason" to inform the employee that his brother had been identified through his DNA, Morrissey said.

"That's precisely the concern," said Stephen Mercer, a Rockville attorney specializing in DNA issues. "The trolling of rogue databases for information about family members is doubly invasive. It makes the persons in the databases -- many who are innocent -- genetic informants about their family members. And it extends that suspicion to their family members."

Morrissey said: "There is no inclusion of DNA that we don't have legally."

Other states and localities maintain "offline" DNA databanks of samples taken from victims or suspects never charged with a crime. Such databases, which also exist in New York, are a violation of the constitutional ban on unreasonable search and seizure, said Barry Scheck, a commissioner on New York state's Forensic Science Review Board. "If I get a sample from you and I don't tell you I want to put it in the database, that violates the scope of the Fourth Amendment," he said.

Prince George's County, for example, maintains a database with DNA profiles of both victims and suspects. Such local databases "have literally no oversight and regulation and yet are pushing the boundaries farther than anyone could imagine," said Patrick Kent, chief of the Maryland public defender's forensic division. "I do not think that victims of crime would be pleased to know that in addition to having been a victim, their DNA profile has been surreptitiously placed into a DNA database."

Prince George's County police spokeswoman Sharon Taylor said: "We manage the collection of evidence consistent with the law. It would be inappropriate for us to make any comment beyond that."

The British Model

Britain, with a database of 4.25 million profiles, has been doing familial searching for five years and has solved at least eight cases with it, said Tony Lake, chief constable of Lincolnshire and recent chairman of the DNA Strategy Board.

He cited as an example the "shoe rapist," who attacked at least six women, each time stealing their high heels. Twenty years later, his sister was arrested for driving under the influence and her DNA run against cold cases. That yielded a close match and led police to her brother. When he was arrested, his DNA was a perfect match and police found more than 100 stiletto heels hidden under a trap door.

In Britain, too, concerns have been raised about the use of familial searching at a time when the database is rapidly expanding to include people arrested for minor offenses and children as young as 10. In one case, a 15-year-old was arrested for refusing to get off a public bus and obstructing a police officer. His DNA was taken. Although the charges were thrown out, the police have refused to remove his DNA profile from the database.

A Rape Victim

In the Lake Charles area of Louisiana, authorities in a nine-county area have uploaded 1,500 DNA profiles taken from victims and suspects. The profiles are kept indefinitely, said George Schiro, DNA technical leader of the Acadiana Crime Lab in New Iberia. "There's nothing in state law that precludes us from doing it."

The lab has never run a familial search against its database, he said. But in 2005, in an effort to solve a string of rapes that had taken place in the little town of Ville Platte between 1987 and 2001, an investigator asked Schiro to review another rape case from 1999. Perhaps the suspect in that attack, the victim's ex-boyfriend, was the serial rapist, said Rudy Guillory, an investigator in the prosecutor's office, recalling what he told Schiro.

So Schiro pulled the files and compared the strings of numbers. What he saw ruled out the ex-boyfriend but implicated a relative of the victim. "Y'all need to check her family," Guillory recalled he said.

"It was really a stroke of luck," Schiro said.

The victim's brother was found in Shreveport, La., and gave a DNA sample. Normand Wilson, 53, is now serving a 35-year sentence.

Richard White, Wilson's attorney, said he feared such cases might make rape victims think twice before reporting an attack. "Would I like to have my rape solved, or do I run the risk of having my DNA profile searched in a way that might point the finger at a family member?" he said.

Wilson's sister echoed that thought. "I feel betrayed," she said. "They did everything behind my back."

Race and Justice

Familial searching of offender databases would be of no use "if close relatives didn't commit crimes," said Frederick Bieber, a medical geneticist at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston.

"For reasons we don't understand, there is often a familial clustering in crime," he said. "This could relate to organized crime families, to street gangs, or it could be dysfunctional family units." He pointed to a 1999 Department of Justice study that found 46 percent of prison inmates had at least one close relative who had been incarcerated.

Behind that statistic is another troubling set of numbers, highlighting an issue at the heart of the debate over familial searching: racial justice. The national database, which is made up mostly of state contributions, has a disproportionate number of DNA profiles from non-whites.

Stanford University law professor Henry T. Greely estimates that at least 40 percent of the FBI database is African American, though they make up only 13 percent of the U.S. population. That is because in an average year, more than 40 percent of people convicted of felonies in the United States are African American, he said.

If the national database were used for familial searching, he said, and assuming that on average each person whose profile in the database has five first-degree relatives, authorities would be "putting under surveillance" roughly a third of the African American population, compared with about 7.5 percent of the European American population, he said.

"I don't think anybody's going to be falsely convicted," he said. "It's the time, hassle and indignity of being interviewed by the police. How much is that worth? How much does that cost a person? I don't know, but it's not zero."

Staff researcher Magda Jean-Louis contributed to this report.
veritas
Other important initiatives by the FBI which I also support -

QUOTE
April 23, 2008 10:50 AM PDT
FBI, politicos renew push for ISP data retention laws



FBI director Robert Mueller calls for new federal data retention laws forcing Internet companies to keep records of what their customers are doing, but without providing details. Several politicians endorsed the idea during a hearing on Tuesday.
(Credit: Anne Broache/News.com)


WASHINGTON--The FBI and multiple members of Congress said on Wednesday that Internet service providers must be legally required to keep records of their users' activities for later review by police.

Their suggestions for mandatory data retention revive a push for potentially sweeping federal laws--which civil libertarians oppose--that flagged last year after the resignation of Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, the idea's most prominent proponent.

FBI Director Robert Mueller told a House of Representatives committee that Internet service providers should be required to keep records of users' activities for two years.

"From the perspective of an investigator, having that backlog of records would be tremendously important if someone comes up on your screen now," Mueller said. "If those records are only kept 15 days or 30 days, you may lose the information you may need to bring that person to justice."

Also lending their support for data retention were Rep. Ric Keller, R-Fla., who said that Internet chat rooms were crammed with sexual predators, and Rep. Lamar Smith of Texas, the senior Republican on the House Judiciary committee and a previous data retention enthusiast. Rep. John Conyers, the senior Democrat and chairman, added that any proposed data retention legislation submitted by the FBI "would be most welcome."

"Records retention by ISPs would be tremendously helpful in giving us a historic basis to make a case on a number of child pornographers who use the Internet to push their pornography" or lure children, Mueller said.

Replied Smith: "I think a number of us may well follow up on that suggestion."

Kim Smith, an aide to Rep. Smith, said in response to questions from News.com that the congressman was offering "no details" and would not be "commenting at this point."

Based on the statements at Wednesday's hearing and previous calls for new laws in this area, the scope of a mandatory data retention law remains fuzzy. It could mean forcing companies to store data for two years about what Internet addresses are assigned to which customers (Comcast said in 2006 that it would be retaining those records for six months).

Or it could be far more intrusive. It could mean keeping track of e-mail and instant-messaging correspondence and what Web pages users visit. Some Democratic politicians have called for data retention laws to extend to domain name registries and Web hosting companies and even social-networking sites. During private meetings with industry officials, FBI and Justice Department representatives have said it would be desirable to force search engines to keep logs--a proposal that could gain additional law enforcement support, but raise additional privacy concerns and potentially conflict with European laws.

Kate Dean, director of the U.S. Internet Service Provider Association, which counts as members AT&T, AOL, Comcast, and Verizon, said in an e-mail message:

Without specifics, it's hard to know what Director Mueller is looking for from industry. The idea of data retention is complex, and Congress will need to examine many issues including which providers would be covered by a retention regime, for what period of time would those organizations be required to keep the data, does the policy idea fit with the today's and tomorrow's technologies, and what are the effects on the consumer--what are the potential risks to subscriber privacy and security? US ISPA members have been at the forefront of child protection initiatives with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children and law enforcement, so we welcome a continued dialogue.

As attorney general until last summer, Gonzales rarely passed up an opportunity to call for data retention. In April 2006, he said Internet providers must retain records for a "reasonable amount of time" and the issue "must be addressed." In September 2006, he added: "This is a national problem that requires federal legislation."

After Gonzales' departure, the Bush administration has been less vocal on lobbying for data retention legislation. During Wednesday's hearing, however, Mueller called for new laws at least three times.

Multiple proposals to mandate data retention have surfaced in the U.S. Congress. One, backed by Rep. Diana DeGette, a Colorado Democrat, said that any Internet service that "enables users to access content" must indefinitely retain records that would permit police to identify each user. Another came from Wisconsin Rep. F. James Sensenbrenner, a close ally of President Bush, and a third was written by Rep. Smith, who endorsed the idea again on Wednesday.

At the moment, Internet service providers typically discard any log file that's no longer required for business reasons such as network monitoring, fraud prevention or billing disputes. Companies do, however, alter that general rule when contacted by police performing an investigation--a practice called data preservation.

A 1996 federal law called the Electronic Communication Transactional Records Act regulates data preservation. It requires Internet providers to retain any "record" in their possession for 90 days "upon the request of a governmental entity."

Because Internet addresses remain a relatively scarce commodity, ISPs tend to allocate them to customers from a pool based on whether a computer is in use at the time. (Two standard techniques used are the Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol and Point-to-Point Protocol over Ethernet.)

In addition, Internet providers are required by another federal law to report child pornography sightings to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, which is in turn charged with forwarding that report to the appropriate police agency.

News.com's Anne Broache reported from Washington, D.C.


Streets Of London - Ralph McTell 1975
http://youtube.com/watch?v=VmKMQI9mbZ8
'Let me take you by the hand and lead you la la la la la la
I'll show you something to make you change your mind...'
veritas
QUOTE
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/na...1,3582903.story

Attorney general targeting international organized crime


Nicholas Kamm / AFP / Getty Images
U.S. Attorney General Mike Mukasey speaks at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, DC on April 23, 2008. Mukasey spoke on on combating the growing threat of international organized crime.


Michael B. Mukasey renews the war on what he calls a growing threat that touches 'all sectors of our economy.'
By Richard B. Schmitt, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
April 24, 2008
WASHINGTON -- Atty. Gen. Michael B. Mukasey offered a stark assessment Wednesday of a rising threat from international organized crime, saying that a new breed of mobsters around the world was infiltrating strategic industries, providing logistical support to terrorists and becoming capable of "creating havoc in our economic infrastructure."

Launching one of his first new law enforcement initiatives since becoming attorney general last fall, Mukasey said he recently revived a multiagency group first established in the Johnson administration with the goal of identifying the most urgent organized crime threats around the world and developing strategies to combat them.

The Organized Crime Council, composed of senior officials from nine federal law enforcement agencies, had not met since the early 1990s, when it went dormant after a series of high-profile victories in the U.S.

"The challenge we face with the new breed of organized criminals is quite different from the one we faced a generation or two ago," Mukasey said, addressing the Center for Strategic and International Studies think tank in Washington. "They are more sophisticated, they are richer, they have greater influence over government and political institutions worldwide, and they are savvier about using the latest technology, first to perpetrate and then cover up their crimes.

"This new group of organized criminals are far more involved in our everyday lives than many people appreciate," he said. "They touch all sectors of our economy, dealing in everything from cigarettes to oil; clothing to pharmaceuticals."

Mukasey said international organized crime groups controlled "significant positions" in global energy and strategic materials and were expanding holdings in the U.S. materials sector.

A strategic plan on fighting organized crime released by the department also said such groups manipulated securities exchanges and laundered billions of dollars through legitimate financial institutions. "They are expanding their holdings in these sectors, which corrupts the normal functioning of markets and may have a destabilizing effect on U.S. geopolitical interests," Mukasey said.

Prosecutors' attention to organized crime has been diverted since the Sept. 11 attacks, as the department has shifted money and people to thwarting terrorists.

Although many experts think the opportunities for corruption are so vast that the problem will never be solved, the speech appeared to be an effort by Mukasey to send a signal about U.S. determination.

"Investigators and lawyers and the folks engaged in organized crime are perfectly aware that this [post-9/11] shift in priorities means criminals are less likely to get caught," said Robert Luskin, a Washington lawyer who works to eradicate organized crime's influence in the Laborers' Union in New York.

"It takes concentrated specialized talent, not unlike our anti-terrorist effort," said John M. Dowd, a Washington lawyer and former organized crime chief in the Justice Department. "I am delighted to see Michael Mukasey revive it. I don't know why it ebbs and flows. To me, it always has to be a priority."

Organized crime has a rich and colorful history at the Justice Department, going back to its battles with gangsters in the Prohibition and Depression eras.

As attorney general in the 1960s, Robert F. Kennedy renewed the nation's attention on the broad threat posed by mobsters. "Strike force" teams helped bring down Mafia bosses and fight organized crime's influence on the Teamsters union.

That battle continues: In February, U.S. authorities indicted 60 people in federal court in Brooklyn, including top leaders of the notorious Gambino family. The prosecution alleged a web of crimes including murders and extortion schemes with links to the construction industry.

Mukasey cited a number of recent arrests showing how the terrain had changed, including the arrest last month of reputed arms trafficker Victor Bout on suspicion of conspiring to sell weapons to terrorists in Colombia; and the case of reputed Russian organized crime kingpin Semyon Mogilevich, known as "the Brainy Don," suspected of corrupting the natural gas industry in the former Soviet Union. Mogilevich was arrested in January in Moscow on tax charges. The U.S. indicted him on racketeering charges in 2003, but Russian authorities have refused to extradite him.

Mukasey said organized crime had also become a major engine behind international smuggling and human trafficking. An FBI-led investigation into smuggling operations in Southern California, known as Operation Smoking Dragon, uncovered extensive Asian involvement in sneaking illicit goods into the U.S. in shipping containers labeled as toys and furniture from China, the attorney general said.



piccadilly
QUOTE

Attorney general targeting international organized crime





.. while protecting national organized crime.
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