Biometrics In Full Swing At Borders
Jan 1, 2005 12:00 PM
Foreign visitors at the 50 busiest land border crossings in 10 states are now being fingerprinted as part of the government's new biometric screening system, US-VISIT.
The system scans photographs of the visitor's face and index fingers into a computer, which are matched with federal agencies' criminal databases.
Homeland Security Undersecretary Asa Hutchinson told reporters that U.S. officials have arrested or denied admission to 372 criminals or immigration violators since the system began last year at 15 seaports and 115 airports. About 17 million people have been enrolled.
The system is actually speeding travelers through processing at ports of entry, he said. It now takes less than 5 minutes to process a visitor at Laredo, Texas; before the program was implemented, it took more than 10 minutes.
Hutchinson acknowledged that much still remains to be done. The system, for example, doesn't check against all federal databases. And the FBI only shares an updated biometric database of terrorists with Homeland Security about once a month, he said.
Another challenge is to set up an exit system so that officials can keep track of foreigners leaving the country. Homeland Security is testing different technologies for an exit system at five ports of entry and will expand the tests to others this year.
US-VISIT still has to be expanded to another 115 land border crossings by the end of 2005. By then, it's expected to process 40 million people crossing U.S. borders, which is less than 10 percent of the 450 million annual border crossings.
Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2008 Penton Media Inc.
Today's New Product
Privaris Biometric Verification SoftwareIn support of the Privaris family of personal identity verification tokens for secure physical and IT access, an updated version of its plusID Manager Version 2.0 software extends the capabilities and convenience to administer and enroll biometric tokens. The software offers multi-client support, import and export functionality, more extensive reporting features and a key server for a more convenient method of securing tokens to the issuing organization. |
advertisement
This month in Access Control
- Targeting The Customer
- Electronic Pedigrees
- One Hero Among Many
- Who? What? When? Where? Why?
- More from September's issue
Latest Jobs
advertisement







