September 19, 2008
FBI
An NYPD detective is e-mailed a photograph of two suspicious men who appear to be casing the Brooklyn Bridge. Her department uploads the picture and inputs details about the pair into a computerized, Internet-based system called eGuardian, looking for similar incidents. Lo and behold, theres a match.
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Its purely a hypothetical, but its exactly the kind of dot-collecting and dot-connecting that will soon be possible between law enforcement and intelligence players at every level of government across the countrythanks to FBI technology.
The eGuardian systemwhich is being piloted by several agencies and will start being rolled out in phases nationwide by years end, complete with trainingwill enable near real-time sharing and tracking of terror information and suspicious activities with our local, state, tribal, and federal partners. Its actually a spin-off of a similar but classified tool called Guardian that weve been using inside the Bureauand sharing with vetted partnersfor the past four years.
How Guardian works. FBI field offices and Legal Attaché offices overseas input suspicious activity reports, potential terrorism threats (like a phoned-in bomb threat), and terrorist incidents (like actual bombings). This information is tracked, triaged, searched, and analyzed by agents and analysts at FBI Headquarters, andif appropriatesubmitted to one of our 106 Joint Terrorism Task Forces around the country for further action.
How eGuardian works. In a very similar way, except it will be available through our secure Law Enforcement Online Internet portal to more than 18,000 agencies, which will be able to run searches and input their own reports. Their entries will be automatically sent to a state fusion center (or a similar intelligence-based hub) for vetting, where trained personnel will evaluate it and then either monitor it, close it, or refer it to the appropriate FBI terror task force. Ultimately, eGuardian will add additional capabilities like geo-spatial mapping, live chats, and link analysis.
Guardian and eGuardian will work together, feeding each other. eGuardian entries with a possible terrorism nexus will be pushed to Guardian and out to our task forces, and unclassified threat and suspicious activity information from the FBI housed in Guardian will be pushed to eGuardian and out to the entire law enforcement community. Its an effective one-two punch.
Urgent matters and investigative issues, however, will continue to be worked with state and local law enforcement through existing FBI channels.
What happens if an incident has no probable link to terrorism? The report is deleted to ensure personal data is not being needlessly stored. If the information is deemed inconclusive, it will remain in eGuardian for up to five years, in accordance with federal regulations.
eGuardian is yet another FBI technology that is enabling information to flow and dots to be connected in powerful new ways. By making the jobs of law enforcement easier, it will help make our communities safer.
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