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Department of Homeland Security Begins Collecting 10 Fingerprints at San Francisco International Airport
- Febuary 14, 2008
Washington, D.C. - The U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced
today that it has begun collecting additional fingerprints from international
visitors arriving at San Francisco International Airport (San Francisco). The
change is part of the department's upgrade from two- to 10-fingerprint
collection to enhance security and facilitate legitimate travel by more
accurately and efficiently establishing and verifying visitors' identities.
"Biometrics have revolutionized our ability to prevent dangerous people from
entering the United States since 2004. Our upgrade to 10 fingerprint collection
builds on our success, enabling us to focus more attention on stopping potential
security risks," US VISIT Director Robert Mocny said. For more than four years,
U.S. Department of State (DOS) consular officers and U.S. Customs and Border
Protection (CBP) officers have been collecting biometrics—digital fingerprints
and a photograph—from all non-U.S. citizens between the ages of 14 and 79, with
some exceptions, when they apply for visas or arrive at U.S. ports of entry.
"Quite simply, this change gives our officers a more accurate idea of who is in
front of them. For legitimate visitors, the process becomes more efficient and
their identities are better protected from theft. For those who may pose a risk,
we will have greater insight into who they are," added Paul Morris, Executive
Director of Admissibility and Passenger Programs, Office of Field Operations,
CBP. DHS's US-VISIT program currently checks a visitor's fingerprints against
records of immigration violators and FBI records of criminals and known or
suspected terrorists. Checking biometrics against the watch list helps officers
make visa determinations and admissibility decisions. Collecting 10 fingerprints
also improves fingerprint-matching accuracy and the department's ability to
compare a visitor's fingerprints against latent fingerprints collected by the
Department of Defense (DOD) and the FBI from known and unknown terrorists all
over the world. Additionally, visitors' fingerprints are checked against the
FBI's Criminal Master File. On an average day at San Francisco, almost 5,000
international visitors complete US VISIT biometric procedures. Visitors from
Japan, the United Kingdom, China and Germany comprise the largest numbers of
international visitors arriving at San Francisco. San Francisco is the next port
of entry to begin collecting 10 fingerprints from international visitors.
Washington Dulles International Airport began 10-fingerprint collection on
November 29, 2007. Thus far, Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta International Airport,
Boston Logan International Airport, Chicago O'Hare International Airport and
George Bush Houston Intercontinental Airport have also begun 10-fingerprint
collection. Four other airports will soon begin collecting additional
fingerprints, including: Miami International Airport, Detroit Metropolitan Wayne
County Airport, Orlando International Airport and New York's John F. Kennedy
International Airport. The remaining air, sea and land border ports of entry
will transition to collecting 10 fingerprints by the end of 2008. Since US VISIT
began in 2004, DHS has used biometric identifiers to prevent the use of
fraudulent documents, protect visitors from identity theft and stop thousands of
criminals and immigration violators from entering the country. US VISIT, in
cooperation with CBP, is leading the transition to a 10-fingerprint collection
standard. This upgrade is the result of an interagency partnership among DHS,
FBI, DOD and DOS.
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