http://entmag.com/news/rss.asp?editorialsid=7193
New FBI Computer System Behind Schedule
by Associated Press
February 22, 2006

The FBI's latest attempt to modernize its computers is running behind
schedule and its budget already has exceeded the cost of the last failed
effort.

FBI Director Robert Mueller and other officials have refused to disclose the
anticipated cost of the Sentinel program, which won't be fully in place
until 2009. But the FBI has set aside $97 million for it this year and is
asking for an additional $100 million in the government spending year that
begins Oct. 1.

Last year, Mueller scrapped the Virtual Case File, Sentinel's $170 million
predecessor, after consultants pronounced it obsolete and riddled with
problems. It had been billed as the final piece of the FBI's computer
upgrade, an instantaneous and paperless way for agents and analysts to
manage all types of investigations.

The computer overhaul became a priority after the Sept. 11 attacks. Members
of Congress and the Sept. 11 commission said modern computers were critical
to enabling the FBI and intelligence agencies to "connect the dots" in
preventing attacks.

The first two phases of the "Trilogy" project -- deployment of a high-speed,
secure FBI computer network and 30,000 new desktop computers -- have been
completed at a cost of $600 million.

The first Sentinel contract was to have been awarded by the end of 2005, but
that date has been pushed back because "we can't not do it right this time,"
an FBI official said on condition of anonymity because the bureau still is
negotiating with contractors.

Lawmakers who have been critical of the FBI in the past said they are not
reassured.

"They either don't have their ducks in a row or they're trying to hide
something," said Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, chairman of the Senate
Finance Committee.

Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont, the senior Democrat on the Senate Judiciary
Committee, said he fears a repeat of the problems that plagued the aborted
project.

"Year after year, good money has gone after bad by the truckload as the
Justice Department, the FBI and GSA have mismanaged this project," Leahy
said. "The administration gave assurances to Congress last year about
turning this debacle around, but the evidence for that so far is anything
but encouraging."

Spokesman for the two companies bidding for the new work, defense
contracting giants Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman, declined to answer
questions about their proposals or the FBI's timetable.

The FBI abandoned the Virtual Case File after Glenn Fine, the Justice
Department inspector general, blamed the bureau's poor planning and
management for most of the problems encountered in designing a system to
move large amounts of investigative information into new digital databases
that could be accessed throughout the FBI.

Many of the management flaws identified by Fine have been fixed, subsequent
reviews have found.

Security for the new system also is a concern. A former FBI analyst, Leandro
Aragoncillo, was arrested last year on spying charges after authorities said
he stole sensitive intelligence reports from FBI computers.

The FBI was supposed to have clamped down on computer access as part of
improved internal security following the unmasking of former FBI agent
Robert Hanssen as a Russian spy.

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