Relevance: supporting · Type: background
Confidence100%
Federal immigration officers frequently use facial recognition technology to identify individuals in the field.
Relevance: primary · Type: background
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The Department of Homeland Security has outlined plans to provide local police collaborating with federal immigration authorities access to facial recognition technology.
Relevance: supporting · Type: background
Confidence100%
A Privacy Threshold Analysis document from the Department of Homeland Security assesses whether the privacy implications of a specific technological tool require further federal review.
Relevance: primary · Type: background
Confidence100%
The ICE Task Force Module is a mobile application that enables local police to scan the faces of individuals during community stops.
Relevance: primary · Type: action
Confidence100%
The application compares captured facial scans against a database containing more than 250 million government records.
Relevance: supporting · Type: background
Confidence100%
The database includes visa records from the State Department and records from the Traveler Verification Service, which is utilized by the Transportation Security Administration for identity verification on international flights.
Relevance: primary · Type: action
Confidence100%
After processing a facial scan, the application directs officers to either proceed without detaining the individual or provides a reference code for obtaining additional information from Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
Relevance: primary · Type: background
Confidence100%
Photographs captured by the mobile application are retained within an internal Department of Homeland Security system for 15 years.
Department of Homeland Security, spokesperson
Relevance: supporting · Type: quote
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"Like other law enforcement agencies, ICE employs various forms of technology to investigate criminal activity and support law enforcement efforts while respecting civil liberties and privacy interests."
Relevance: supporting · Type: background
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Local officers collaborating with federal immigration authorities are designated in the document as ICE non-federal law enforcement officers.
Relevance: supporting · Type: background
Confidence100%
These local officers are likely participants in the federal 287(g) program.
Relevance: supporting · Type: background
Confidence100%
The Task Force Model is a subset of the 287(g) program that authorizes local police to arrest individuals suspected of immigration violations during routine duties.
Relevance: supporting · Type: background
Confidence100%
Approximately 1,300 police agencies participate in the Task Force Model across the U.S.
Clare Garvie, deputy director of the Technology Law and Policy Program at New York University School of Law's Policing Project
Relevance: supporting · Type: quote
Confidence100%
"It raises more questions than I think it answers."
Relevance: primary · Type: background
Confidence100%
According to the document, the mobile application launched in September of the previous year.
Clare Garvie, deputy director of the Technology Law and Policy Program at New York University School of Law's Policing Project
Relevance: supporting · Type: quote
Confidence100%
"It's unclear to me whether a pre-existing stop based on some level of suspicion is required before law enforcement can use this app. Can they walk around taking photos of whoever as sort of a dragnet way to attempt to identify individuals who might be in the country unlawfully?"
Relevance: supporting · Type: background
Confidence100%
The application operates similarly to Mobile Fortify, an existing facial recognition tool used by Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Customs and Border Protection officers.
Relevance: supporting · Type: background
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Officials have not confirmed whether the new application utilizes the same underlying technology as Mobile Fortify.
Relevance: supporting · Type: event
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Residents in Minnesota and Maine reported that federal immigration officers photographed their faces and vehicle license plates during surveillance activities.
Relevance: primary · Type: action
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Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin acknowledged during a congressional hearing that the department has utilized facial recognition technology on demonstrators.
Relevance: supporting · Type: action
Confidence100%
Markwayne Mullin stated that the agency successfully identified individuals who attended protests in Oregon and subsequently participated in demonstrations outside the Delaney Hall Detention Facility.
Patrick Eddington, senior fellow in homeland security and civil liberties at the Cato Institute
Relevance: supporting · Type: quote
Confidence100%
"This kind of technology which can impact individual rights, when it's scaled, it can have potentially very, very large effects affecting lots and lots of people. It's like a Bill of Rights disaster pretty much waiting to happen."
Relevance: supporting · Type: background
Confidence100%
Law enforcement officers conducting immigration enforcement scans do not have prior knowledge of an individual's citizenship status before initiating a scan.
Department of Homeland Security, official document
Relevance: supporting · Type: quote
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"It is conceivable that a photo taken by an ICE non-federal law enforcement officer using the TFM mobile application could be that of someone other than a removable individual, including U.S. citizens."
Relevance: primary · Type: event
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Former acting Immigration and Customs Enforcement director Todd Lyons indicated in a letter to members of Congress that the agency grants itself broad authority to collect information from individuals encountered by officers.
Cooper Quintin, senior staff technologist at the Electronic Frontier Foundation
Relevance: supporting · Type: quote
Confidence100%
"This app wouldn't work if they didn't have databases to pull people's pictures from and compare against. They're playing semantics. They're certainly not being forthright."
Cooper Quintin, senior staff technologist at the Electronic Frontier Foundation
Relevance: supporting · Type: quote
Confidence100%
"It makes this sort of face surveillance ubiquitous on American streets. I don't think that Americans should tolerate law enforcement being able to scan anyone's face at any time for any reason to try to determine their identity. This is the new form of 'papers, please.'"
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