ACLU Demands Shutdown of Unlawful Passenger-Tracking System (9/5/2007)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: media@dcaclu.org
WASHINGTON – In formal comments filed today with the Department of Homeland
Security, the American Civil Liberties Union demanded that the Department of
Homeland Security (DHS) shut down its illegal Automated Targeting System (ATS)
program. The program, which violates a congressional mandate barring DHS from
assigning risk levels to ordinary Americans, uses secret criteria and computer
algorithms to calculate the security risks of ordinary Americans.
"Congress has banned this type of program with good reason: It rates the
potential for terrorism of every traveler and violates every American’s right to
privacy," said Barry Steinhardt, director of the ACLU Technology and Liberty
Program. "The judgments about Americans calculated by ATS will be stored for
years, and we have no idea how they may be used in the future. The benefit to
the government is extremely questionable, but the consequences for Americans are
simply dangerous."
The ACLU has urged the Department of Homeland Security to end the program
since its existence was revealed last November. As part of the last three DHS
appropriations acts, legislators have forbidden DHS from developing or testing
any program that uses algorithms to calculate the security risks of ordinary
Americans whose names are not on watch lists. ATS ranks citizens using unknown
but inevitably imprecise algorithms and draws from databases with known errors.
Even security officials, including the Secure Flight Working Group, have said
they cannot determine who will be a threat from the characteristics ATS
uses.
"No government has the right to say to law abiding citizens: ‘Sorry, we can’t
let you travel freely, but we can’t tell you why because it’s secret’ –
especially in America," said ACLU Senior Legislative Counsel Tim Sparapani. "ATS
isn’t just a flawed program – it’s an illegal one. Secret algorithms and
bureaucratic black magic are not the answer to national security problems."
The program was approved without public or congressional consideration,
despite Congress’s ban on these types of tracking systems used for people. The
government tracked cargo using a similar system, but it has never been given
congressional approval to track people as cargo has been tracked. The ACLU filed
its formal comments on ATS in response to a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
published on August 6 in the Federal Register.
"In spite of broad public outcry, the substance and most of the details of
the program remain the same – including its most objectionable elements," said
the ACLU in its comments to DHS. "The Department of Homeland Security must curb
the excesses of ATS and end its continuing and illegal efforts to categorize
innocent travelers as security risks based on computer analysis. If DHS is
unwilling to act Congress should take further action to end ATS and protect the
privacy of travelers."
The full version of the ACLU's comments to the Department of Homeland
Security about ATS can be found at: http://www.aclu.org/safefree/general/31556lgl20070905.html
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