Showing posts with label biometrics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label biometrics. Show all posts

Monday, May 23, 2011

Mission Afghanistan: Pamir Air Crash

Part 5: Humanitarian Effort in the War Zone

Pamir Airways Flight 112 left Kunduz Province in Afghanistan last May bound for Kabul with 44 people aboard. About 25 miles from its destination, in heavy wind and dense fog, the plane crashed into a mountain in the remote Hindu Kush nearly 14,000 feet above sea level. No one survived.

The crew and passengers were mostly Afghan, but the dead also included citizens of Turkey, Great Britain, the Philippines, and the U.S. Because of the one American victim, our legal attaché in Kabul was asked to assist the Afghan government with recovering and identifying the bodies, a task that would prove as grim as it was difficult.

The crash site, in such an inaccessible location and at such a high elevation, could only be safely approached on foot, and then only after the weather improved. When teams were finally able to reach the site, they were met with a horrific scene, and what began as a recovery operation soon turned into an extraordinary humanitarian effort to identify the victims and repatriate their remains—and to bring some relief to the victims’ loved ones.

“Just hiking to the foothill of the crash site was a challenge, and then you’re looking straight up at this big slide of debris,” said Special Agent Adriene Sullivan, a 14-year FBI veteran.

“You are going up this ravine and everything is loose rock,” she said. “If you lose your footing, you're going all the way down.” Wearing an armored-plated vest and carrying a weapon—even at that elevation the Taliban was still a threat—Sullivan recalled, “I just had to take a deep breath and go up the mountain. It was tough.”

Dealing with the crash site was even tougher. The plane was estimated to be traveling at 250 mph when it slammed into the mountainside. The impact was so violent that passengers’ bodies could not be identified.

“There was not a lot to go on,” Sullivan said. “Bodies were unrecognizable, and nothing was on them like a wallet in someone’s back pocket.”

Agents and other Bureau personnel worked with the Afghan military and international partners to retrieve 180 bone and tissue samples, which were transported to the Afghan National Army morgue in Kabul. There, Turkish and British disaster victim identification teams conducted sophisticated deep tissue and bone DNA samples, using expertise unavailable to the Afghans or our agents overseas.

“We learned a lot about that type of DNA sampling and so did the Afghans,” Sullivan said. The samples were sent to Turkey and England, and remarkably, all 44 individuals were identified.

Months after the crash—which was ruled a weather-related accident—a ceremony was held in Kabul so family members could bury their loved ones.

“It was very satisfying that we were able to help the families,” said Sullivan, who volunteered for a year-long assignment in the war zone. “Everybody worked together incredibly well, and the Afghans were extremely grateful for our help.”

This wasn’t a typical mission for our people on the front lines of the fight against terrorism, but it was an important one, and it forged lasting relationships with the Afghans and our international partners.

Next: Intelligence drives the mission

Mission Afghanistan: Biometrics

Part 4: A Measure of Progress

The Afghan biometrics program was barely off the ground when it started having an impact.

 Formally established in late 2009 to collect the fingerprints, iris scans, and facial images of Afghan national security forces, the program’s initial goal was to keep criminals and Taliban insurgents from infiltrating the army and police force. But information sharing—with partners like the FBI—is also a key component of the program.

“The FBI has collected thousands of latent prints from the battlefield in Afghanistan,” said Special Agent Janeen DiGuiseppi, our liaison officer in Kabul for the biometrics program. “When the Afghans started enrolling people, we began to cross-check our records with theirs.”

In fact, when they searched their database, the Afghans identified the 82nd unidentified latent print the FBI passed to them and found that it belonged to an individual they had arrested a few months before as an accessory to a crime. The individual’s prints had originally been collected in 2007 in connection with a different crime.

“We were able to give the Afghans information to help them prosecute the case,” DiGuiseppi said. “That’s exactly the kind of information exchange we are looking for—going both ways. It helps solve crimes, and it enhances security for Afghans and Americans in the war theater.”

The biometric program answers two basic questions, said Air Force Lt. Col. Cristiano Marchiori, an advisor to the program: “Who are you, and are you a bad guy?” Already 300,000 Afghans have been enrolled, from soldiers and police to criminals in prison. The ability of the Afghans to collect, store, and match this data against other sources of information is an invaluable tool as the government strives to prevent fraud and corruption.

The centerpiece of the program is the Afghan Automated Biometric Identification System (AABIS), administered by about 50 Afghans at the Ministry of Interior in Kabul. The FBI supports the effort through training and mentoring, along with data sharing, said DiGuiseppi. “So far it’s been a great partnership. And as the program grows, it will become even more useful.”

At the biometrics offices, three shifts of examiners catalog and check fingerprints on large computer screens, while technicians prepare “jump kits”—laptop computers, scanners, and other equipment used in the field to collect fingerprints, facial images, and iris scans. The Afghan colonel who supervises the program emphasized that Afghans are doing all the collections and maintaining the database, but he readily acknowledged the FBI’s role in the program. “We are very thankful for the FBI’s help and their willingness to train and assist us,” he said.

The partnership is mutually beneficial. “A strong Afghan biometric program reduces the enemy’s anonymity and his capability to operate anonymously in the battle space,” said Marchiori. “If we have one unique identifier—a set of prints, an iris scan—it’s hard for the enemy to hide among the population when he’s trying to register a vehicle or vote or move around the country freely.”

Afghan Ministry of Interior officials plan to use the biometrics program to enroll eight million citizens as part of a national ID effort. “This is for the betterment of the country,” one Afghan official said. “This is for security and for helping the Afghan people.”

Next: A humanitarian mission in a dangerous place.

Friday, April 25, 2008

Iraqi Government Expands Use of Biometrics

By Navy Seaman William Selby
Special to American Forces Press Service

April 24, 2008 - The Iraqi government has expanded its use of
biometric identification, a U.S. official in Iraq said yesterday. While the biometric program was procured to screen for identification of the government's civilian employees, police and army, it has expanded to identify the deceased and screen for previous criminal activity, U.S. Army Lt. Col. John Velliquette Jr., Iraqi biometrics manager for the Coalition Police Assistance Training Team, said in a conference call with online journalists and "bloggers."

"The Iraqis are embracing it and moving it beyond its initial capability of just being a civil verification system," Velliquette said.

Velliquette said the Iraqis use an
automated fingerprint identification system to record data on Iraqi citizens and persons of interest.

"Currently in the system, we have about 848,000
biometric records," Velliquette said.

The records include 12,000
criminal records, 375,000 civil fingerprint records, 111,000 fingerprint records from the Defense Ministry, and 21,000 fingerprint records from the Justice Ministry.

"The Iraqi AFIS program is very successful," Velliquette said. "They're starting to collect [latent fingerprints] at
crimes scenes and making latent matches."

Iraqi investigators recently made a latent fingerprint match at a
crime scene involving a high-ranking Iraqi official. It is not yet known whether the official is a suspect in the crime, he said.

"They collected the latent print and actually made a successful match, which is quite an accomplishment for them," Velliquette said.

Iraqi and coalition forces collect fingerprints, iris scans, picture profiles, and voiceprints for
biometric records. However, Velliquette said, the Iraqis store only the fingerprints in the AFIS system.

Velliquette explained how the
biometric records are stored and identified.

Each individual is assigned an identification number consisting of the date the
biometrics were collected as well as the number of the kit that was used, Velliquette said. Each identification number is verified by the individual's fingerprint, and that information is matched with biographical information, he added.

The main purpose of the
biometrics system is to identify criminals and insurgents who infiltrated the Iraqi military and police, Velliquette said.

(
Navy Seaman William Selby works for the New Media branch of American Forces Information Service.)

Thursday, June 28, 2007

2007 Biometric Consortium Conference and Biometrics Technology Expo

Dates: September 11-13, 2007

Location: Baltimore Convention Center, Baltimore, Maryland, USA

Conference Registration
Fees:
Government/Non-Profit - $495
Industry/Consultant/Other - $595
Student - $295
Exhibit Hall Only - Free

Conference Internet Web Site
www.nist.gov/bc2007/

Expo Internet Web Site
www.biometricstechexpo.com

Anticipated Attendees
We anticipate 800-1000 attendees at the Conference with 100 speakers, representatives from over 60 federal, State and Local agencies, and 25 universities. Attendees will include government executives and program managers, biometric
technology vendors, system integrators, commercial technology users, researchers, and policy makers.

2007 Program
As the leading Biometric conference, BC2007 will address the important role that biometrics plays in the identification and verification of individuals for government and commercial applications worldwide.

Scheduled Keynote Speaker:
“Dr. John H. Marburger, III, Science Advisor to the President and Director of the Office of Science and
Technology Policy“
Scheduled Sessions:
Advanced Biometric Systems and Technologies
Biometric Standards
Biometric
Technology in the Department of Justice
Biometrics in Financial Applications
Challenges and Opportunities to Implementing Biometrics in Transportation
Department of Defense
Department of Homeland Security
Department of Justice
Executive Office of the President of the US, National Science & Technology Council, Subcommittee on Biometrics & Identity Management
International Biometric Industry Association
Introduction to Biometrics
Nanotechnology and Biometrics
National Institute of Standards and
Technology
Research Symposium (CITeR/IEEE)
Security of Biometrics
Status of Biometrics and Other Special Topics

2007 Biometric Consortium Conference Sponsors:
National Institute of Standards & Technology (NIST)
National Security Agency (NSA)
Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
DoD Biometrics Task Force
National Institute of
Justice (NIJ)
General Services Administration - Office of Technology Strategy
Volpe National Transportation Systems Center, U.S. Department of Transportation
Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association