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* FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
FRIDAY, MAY 14, 2004
WWW.USDOJ.GOV
* * OJP
CONTACT: LINDA MANSOUR
(202) 616-3534
*
*_ FACT SHEET:
NATIONAL CRIMINAL INTELLIGENCE SHARING PLAN
_*
*/�This plan represents law enforcement�s commitment to take it upon
itself to ensure that the dots are connected, be it in crime or
terrorism. The plan is the outcome of an unprecedented effort by law
enforcement agencies, with the strong support of the Department of
Justice, to strengthen the nation�s security through better
intelligence analysis and sharing.�/ *
*- Attorney General John Ashcroft, May 14, 2004*
The Department of Justice is effectively pursuing the goals of the
National Criminal Intelligence Sharing Plan
by ensuring that all
of its components are effectively sharing information with each
other and the rest of the nation�s law enforcement community.
*Activities by DOJ and Related Agencies:*
* Through the Global Justice Information Sharing Initiative, the
Attorney General captures the views of more than 30 groups
representing 1.2 million justice professionals from all levels
of government. Global members wrote the National Criminal
Intelligence Sharing Plan and published guides, best
practices, and standards for information sharing.
* The Department�s Chief Information Officer, under the
authority of the Deputy Attorney General, has formed a Law
Enforcement Information Sharing Initiative to establish a
strategy for the Department of Justice to routinely share
information to all levels of the law enforcement community and
to guide the investment of resources in information systems
that will further this goal. The strategy identifies how the
Department of Justice will support the implementation of the
Plan.
* The newly established Criminal Intelligence Coordinating
Council (CICC) under Global will serve to set national-level
policies to implement the Plan and monitor its progress on the
state and local level. The CICC will work with the
Department�s Law Enforcement Information Strategy Initiative
and with the Justice Intelligence Coordinating Council,
created by a directive of the Attorney General, to improve the
flow of intelligence information among federal, state, and
local law enforcement agencies.
* The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has built an
enterprise-wide intelligence program to fulfill its
responsibility to get vital information about those who would
do us harm to those who can act to prevent that harm. To that
end, the FBI has built robust intelligence production and
sharing processes enabled by technologies developed and
operated by the Criminal Justice Information Systems (CJIS)
Division. The FBI has established an intelligence requirements
process to both drive its investigative work against common
threats and to satisfy the information needs of the larger
U.S. national security community, including other partners in
law enforcement. This process ensures that the FBI produces
not only the information it can produce, but also the
information it must produce to safeguard the nation.
In addition, the FBI has implemented a policy of "writing to
release" to ensure the maximum amount of information is pushed to
key customers and partners at the lowest possible classification
level. The FBI Intelligence Webpage on Law Enforcement Online was
created to make this information available at the unclassified level
for FBI partners in state, local, and tribal law enforcement.
Finally, the FBI has established Field Intelligence Groups (FIG) in
each FBI field office to ensure the execution of the intelligence
program in FBI field divisions. The FIGs are the bridge that joins
national intelligence with regional and local intelligence
information through entities like the Joint Terrorism Task Forces.
* The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), in partnership with
the High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area Program and the
Regional Information Sharing Systems (RISS), is developing the
National Virtual Pointer System (NVPS) that will allow
federal, state, local, and tribal law enforcement agencies
access to pointer databases through a single point of entry.
Through NVPS, participating agencies will be able to determine
if any other law enforcement entity is focused on the same
investigative target-regardless of the crime. They will be
linked to the agent or law enforcement officer who has
information on the related case. Information will be
transmitted over the National Law Enforcement
Telecommunications System and RISSnet, the secure web-based
communication system operated by a collaborative organization
of state and local justice officials.
* All components of the Department of Justice have adopted a
common language for sharing information among differing
computer systems, the Justice XML Data Dictionary. All federal
grant programs to criminal justice agencies will also include
a special condition calling for the use of this standard.
* The Department of Justice, through the FBI, Office of Justice
Programs (OJP) and the Office of Community-Oriented Policing
Services (COPS), is providing training and technical
assistance to criminal justice policy leaders, law enforcement
professionals, and information technology professionals in
standards and policies to enable information sharing, improve
the use of intelligence by law enforcement, and build systems
that tie into the nation�s existing information-sharing networks.
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04-329
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Source: Justice Department