40 years war: surveilling Americans.

AuthorWeigel, David
PositionCitings - Managing records - Brief article

JUST A FEW days before the November elections, the Department of Homeland Security made an announcement carefully crafted to be read by almost nobody. It slipped a notice in The Federal Register, the government's daily publication, about an ongoing program that was tracking almost everyone, Americans and foreign visitor alike, who crossed one of the country's borders.

The Automated Targeting System (ATS), launched in 2002, is a vast database that records who is traveling, gives them risk assessments, and adds them to a database for at least four years. The results of the assessment remain under wraps. If anyone has been removed from the ATS, he hasn't been informed.

Congress never officially approved the program. When the Associated Press asked if it was illegal, Homeland Security Secretary Michael...

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