Here’s a list you don’t want to get on

Monday, 29 Sep, 2011 0

In all probability, it’s not likely you’ll make this list but there’s a good reason to stay off it: once you name appears, it may be very difficult to get off it.

US government terrorist watch list documents show that is the case, says the New York Times in a look at the inner workings of the TSA’s most famous list.

Agents are routinely instructed to remove someone’s name if the investigation is completed with no charges, or if charges are dropped, but the FBI may still keep a name on the dreaded list as a national security risk.

“In the United States, you are supposed to be assumed innocent,” says a counsel at the Electronic Privacy Information Center. “But on the watch list, you may be assumed guilty, even after the court dismisses your case.”

The story explains the criteria for making the list for the first time, says the Times.

In the past, some have complained the list is haphazard.

But FBI officials say the list has a very detailed process for adding people names.

The list shows the government is balancing civil liberties with a careful process for getting people off the list, according to Timothy J. Healy, the director of the F.B.I.’s Terrorist Screening Center

 “There has been a lot of criticism about the watch list,” claiming that it is “haphazard,” he told the Times. “But what this illustrates is that there is a very detailed process that the F.B.I. follows in terms of nominations of watch-listed people.”

Still, some of the procedures drew criticism from civil liberties advocates, including the Electronic Privacy Information Center, which made the original request and provided the documents to The New York Times, the newspaper says.

The F.B.I.’s Terrorist Screening Center shares their data with other federal agencies for screening aircraft passengers, people who are crossing the border and people who apply for visas. The data is also used by local police officers to check names during traffic stops.

How many names are there?

About 420,000, with 8,000 of them Americans. About 16,000 people are not allowed to fly, a number that includes roughly 500 Americans.

“Suspects are not informed they are on the list or given a chance to challenge the allegations that put them there,” Newser says, adding:

“An ACLU counsel calls it a secret determination, that you have no input into, that you are a terrorist."

By David Wilkening

 



 

profileimage

David



Most Read

Vegas’s Billion-Dollar Secrets – What They Don’t Want Tourists to Know

Visit Florida’s New CEO Bryan Griffin Shares His Vision for State Tourism with Graham

Chicago’s Tourism Renaissance: Graham Interviews Kristin Reynolds of Choose Chicago

Graham Talks with Cassandra McCauley of MMGY NextFactor About the Latest Industry Research

Destination International’s Andreas Weissenborn: Research, Advocacy, and Destination Impact

Graham and Don Welsh Discuss the Success of Destinations International’s Annual Conference

Graham and CEO Andre Kiwitz on Ventura Travel’s UK Move and Recruitment for the Role

Brett Laiken and Graham Discuss Florida’s Tourism Momentum and Global Appeal

Graham and Elliot Ferguson on Positioning DC as a Cultural and Inclusive Global Destination

Graham Talks to Fraser Last About His England-to-Ireland Trek for Mental Health Awareness

Kathy Nelson Tells Graham About the Honour of Hosting the World Cup and Kansas City’s Future

Graham McKenzie on Sir Richie Richardson’s Dual Passion for Golf and His Homeland, Antigua
TRAINING & COMPETITION
Skip to toolbar
Clearing CSS/JS assets' cache... Please wait until this notice disappears...
Updating... Please wait...