Preliminary Congressional Investigation Finds Watch Lists Plagued with Systemic Flaws (8/22/2008)
ACLU calls for lists to be scrapped and for DHS to approach airline
security in reasonable and effective manner
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: (202) 675-2312, media@dcaclu.org or (212) 549-2646, media@aclu.org
WASHINGTON, DC – In response to
today’s Wall Street Journal article on the flaws found in the terrorist watch
lists by a preliminary congressional investigation, the American Civil Liberties
Union calls on all presidential candidates, as well as current President Bush,
to pledge to put a moratorium on the use of the lists unless major overhauls are
made. The investigation found the current database system beleaguered with flaws
and technological hurdles. Not only that, but the program being designed to
replace the current database is facing similar systemic difficulties, while the
contractors hired for its creation are struggling to move toward
completion.
“The time for the Department of
Homeland Security (DHS) to scrap their current approach to airline security is
well overdue, now that the Terrorist Screening Center’s terrorist watch lists have passed
one million entries,” said Barry Steinhardt, director of the ACLU Technology and
Liberty Program. “The American people would be comforted if our presidential
candidates denounced these burdensome practices. Senators McCain and Obama
should declare a moratorium on the use of the lists unless drastic measures are
taken to improve their accuracy, and protect innocent Americans hoping to
travel without burden.”
The ACLU calls for the following
measures to be taken: i) a dramatic downsizing of the
terrorist watch lists to contain names limited to only those for whom there is
credible evidence of terrorist ties or
activities; ii) implementation of a true redress
process with full due process rights is created so that innocent people who
find themselves mistakenly on the lists can be taken off - and
stay off; iii) a complete overhaul of the computer
databases used to house the watch lists.
“Enough is enough,” said Timothy
Sparapani, ACLU Senior Legislative Counsel. “Watch list systems are worse than
worthless. They create security risks by diverting scarce homeland security
resources away from actual terrorists by focusing attention on hundreds of
thousands, if not millions, of innocent travelers. Those innocent victims
wrongly caught in the dragnet of suspicion are left without recourse to clear
their good name. Upon completion of the investigation that uncovered all these
deficiencies, Congress should publish all findings and recommend that
DHS approach airline security in a manner that is both effective for our
nation’s security and respects the freedom and liberty of innocent
travelers.”
The ACLU of Pennsylvania this week
filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of Erich Scherfen and his wife, Rabina Tareen,
who have both been wrongly placed on the terrorist watch list. Scherfen, a
decorated veteran of the Persian Gulf War and a pilot for a regional commuter
airline, has received no explanation for having been placed on the list, as
his inquiries have seemingly been deposited into the black hole the government
seems to throw all complaints of this nature into. His employer has
suspended him without pay and he stands to be fired October 1 if he is
unable to clear his name. Scherfen's case crystallizes the inherent problems
with the terrorist watch list and the ways in which innocent Americans can be
unjustly impacted.
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