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Postal Service Has Its Eye on You
By John Berlau
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Since 1997, the U.S. Postal Service has been conducting a
customer-surveillance program, 'Under the Eagle's Eye,' and reporting
innocent activity to federal law enforcement.

Remember "Know Your Customer"? Two years ago the federal
government
tried to
require banks to profile every customer's "normal and expected
transactions"
and report the slightest deviation to the feds as a "suspicious
activity."
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. withdrew the requirement in March
1999
after receiving 300,000 opposing comments and massive bipartisan
opposition.

But while your bank teller may not have been snooping and snitching on
your
every financial move, your local post office has been (and is) watching
you
closely, Insight has learned. That is, if you have bought money orders,
made wire transfers or sought cash cards from a postal clerk. Since
1997,
in fact, the window clerk may very well have reported you to the
government
as a "suspicious" customer. It doesn't matter that you are not a drug
dealer, terrorist or other type of criminal or that the transaction itself
was perfectly legal. The guiding principle of the new postal program to
combat money laundering, according to a U.S. Postal Service training
video
obtained by Insight, is: "It's better to report 10 legal transactions than
to let one illegal transaction get by."

Many privacy advocates see similarities in the post office's
customer-surveillance program, called "Under the Eagle's Eye," to the
"Know
Your Customer" rules. In fact, in a postal-service training manual also
obtained by Insight, postal clerks are admonished to "know your
customers."

Both the manual and the training video give a broad definition of
"suspicious" in instructing clerks when to fill out a "suspicious
activity
report" after a customer has made a purchase. "The rule of thumb is if it
seems suspicious to you, then it is suspicious," says the manual. "As
we

said before, and will say again, it is better to report many legitimate
transactions that seem suspicious than let one illegal one slip through."

It is statements such as these that raise the ire of leading privacy
advocates on both the left and right, most of whom didn't know about the

program until asked by Insight to comment. For example, Rep. Ron
Paul,
R-Texas, who led the charge on Capitol Hill against the "Know Your
Customer" rules, expressed both surprise and concern about "Under the
Eagle's Eye." He says the video's instructions to report transactions as
suspicious are "the reverse of what the theory used to be: We were
supposed
to let guilty people go by if we were doing harm to innocent people" when
the methods of trying to apprehend criminals violated the rights of
ordinary citizens. Paul says he may introduce legislation to stop "Under
the Eagle's Eye."

The same sort of response came from another prominent critic of "Know
Your
Customer," this time on the left, who was appalled by details of the
training video. "The postal service is training its employees to invade
their customers' privacy," Greg Nojeim, associate director of the
American
Civil Liberties Union Washington National Office, tells Insight. "This
training will result in the reporting to the government of tens of
thousands of innocent transactions that are none of the government's
business. I had thought the postal-service's eagle stood for freedom.
Now I
know it stands for, 'We're watching you!'"

But postal officials who run "Under the Eagle's Eye" say that flagging
customers who do not follow "normal" patterns is essential if law
enforcement is to catch criminals laundering money from illegal
transactions. "The postal service has a responsibility to know what their
legitimate customers are doing with their instruments," Al Gillum, a
former
postal inspector who now is acting program manager, tells Insight. "If
people are buying instruments outside of a norm that the entity itself has
to establish, then that's where you start with suspicious analysis,
suspicious reporting. It literally is based on knowing what our legitimate
customers do, what activities they're involved in."

Gillum's boss, Henry Gibson, the postal-service's Bank Secrecy Act
compliance officer, says the anti-money-laundering program started in
1997
already has helped catch some criminals. "We've received
acknowledgment
from our chief postal inspector that information from our system was very
helpful in the actual catching of some potential bad guys," Gibson says.

Gillum and Gibson are proud that the postal service received a letter of

commendation from then-attorney general Janet Reno in 2000 for this
program.
The database system the postal service developed with Information
Builders,
an information-technology consulting firm, received an award from
Government
Computer News in 2000 and was a finalist in the government/nonprofit
category for the 2001 Computerworld Honors Program. An Information
Builders
press release touts the system as "a standard for Bank Secrecy Act
compliance and anti-money-laundering controls."

Gibson and Gillum say the program resulted from new regulations
created by
the Clinton-era Treasury Department in 1997 to apply provisions of the
Bank
Secrecy Act to "money service businesses" that sell financial
instruments
such as stored-value cash cards, money orders and wire transfers, as
well
as banks. Surprisingly, the postal service sells about one-third of all
U.S. money orders, more than $27 billion last year. It also sells
stored-value cards and some types of wire transfers. Although the
regulations were not to take effect until 2002, Gillum says the postal
service wanted to be "proactive" and "visionary."

Postal spokesmen emphasize strongly that programs take time to put in
place
and they are doing only what the law demands.

It also was the Bank Secrecy Act that opened the door for the "Know
Your

Customer" rules on banks, to which congressional leaders objected as a
threat to privacy. Lawrence Lindsey, now head of the Bush
administration's
National Economic Council, frequently has pointed out that more than
100,000 reports are collected on innocent bank customers for every one
conviction of money laundering. "That ratio of 99,999-to-1 is something
we
normally would not tolerate as a reasonable balance between privacy
and the
collection of guilty verdicts," Lindsey wrote in a chapter of the
Competitive Enterprise Institute's book The Future of Financial Privacy,
published last year.

Critics of this snooping both inside and outside the postal service are
howling mad that the agency's reputation for protecting the privacy of its
customers is being compromised. "It sounds to me that they're going
past
the Treasury guidelines," says Rick Merritt, executive director of
PostalWatch, a private watchdog group. The regulations, for example,
do not
give specific examples of suspicious activity, leaving that largely for the
regulated companies to determine. But the postal-service training video
points to lots of "red flags," such as a customer counting money in the
line. It warns that even customers whom clerks know often should be
considered suspect if they frequently purchase money orders.

The video, which Gibson says cost $90,000 to make, uses entertaining
special
effects to illustrate its points. Employing the angel-and-devil
technique
often used in cartoons, the video presents two tiny characters in the
imagination of a harried clerk. Regina Goodclerk, the angel, constantly
urges the clerk to file suspicious-activity reports on customers. "Better
safe than sorry," she says. Sam Slick, the devil, wants to give
customers
the benefit of the doubt.

Some of the examples given are red flags such as a sleazy-looking
customer
offering the postal clerk a bribe. But the video also encourages reports to
be filed on what appear to be perfectly legal money-order purchases. A
black male teacher and Little League coach whom the female clerk, also
black, has known for years walks into the post office wearing a crisp,
pinstriped suit and purchases $2,800 in money orders, just under the
$3,000
daily minimum for which the postal service requires customers to fill out
a
form. He frequently has been buying money orders during the last few
days.

"Gee, I know he seems like an okay guy," Regina Goodclerk tells the
employee. "But buying so many money orders all of a sudden and just
under
the reporting limit, I'd rather be sure. He's a good guy, but ... this is
just too suspicious to let go by."

Gillum says this is part of the message that postal clerks can't be too
careful because anyone could be a potential money launderer. "A Little
League coach could be a deacon in the church, could be the most
upstanding
citizen in the community, but where is that person getting $2,800 every
day?" Gillum asks. "Why would a baseball coach, a schoolteacher in
town,
buy [that many money orders]? Our customers don't have that kind of
money.
If he's a schoolteacher, if he's got a job on the side, he's going to have
a bank account and going to write checks on it, so why does he want to
buy

money orders? That's the point."

Despite the fact that the Little League coach in the video was black,
Gillum
insists that the postal service tells its employees not to target by
race or
appearance.

One thing that should set off alarms, the postal service says, is a
customer
objecting to filling out an 8105-A form that requests their date of
birth,
occupation and driver's license or other government-issued ID for a
purchase
of money orders of $3,000 or more. If they cancel the purchase or
request a
smaller amount, the clerk automatically should fill out Form 8105-B, the

"suspicious-activity" report. "Whatever the reason, any customer who
switches from a transaction that requires an 8105-A form to one that
doesn't
should earn himself or herself the honor of being described on a B
form,"
the training manual says.

But the "suspicious" customers might just be concerned about privacy,
says
Solveig Singleton, a senior analyst at the Competitive Enterprise
Institute.
And a professional criminal likely would know that $3,000 was the
reporting
requirement before he walked into the post office. "I think there's a
lot of
reasons that people might not want to fill out such forms; they may
simply
think it's none of the post office's business," Singleton tells Insight.

"The presumption seems to be that from the standpoint of the post office
and the Bank Secrecy regulators every citizen is a suspect."

Both Singleton and Nojeim say "Under the Eagle's Eye" unfairly targets
the
poor, minorities and immigrants - people outside of the traditional
banking
system. "A large proportion of the reports will be immigrants sending
money
back home," Nojeim says. Singleton adds, "It lends itself to
discrimination
against people who are sort of marginally part of the ordinary banking
system or who may not trust things like checks and credit cards."

There's also the question of what happens with the information once it's

collected. Gillum says that innocent customers should feel secure
because
the information reported about "suspicious" customers is not
automatically
sent to the Treasury Department's Financial Crimes Enforcement
Network
(FinCEN) to be shared with law-enforcement agencies worldwide.
Although he
says FinCEN wants the postal service to send all reports along to it, the
postal authorities only will send the clerks' reports if they fit "known

parameters" for suspicious activity. "We are very sensitive to the
private
citizenry and their rights," Gillum insists. "For what it's worth, we
have
every comfort level that, if we make a report, there are all kinds of
reasons to believe that there is something going on there beyond just a
legitimate purchase of money orders."

But Gillum would not discuss any of the "parameters" the postal service
uses to test for suspicious activity, saying that's a secret held among
U.S. law-enforcement agencies. And if a clerk's report isn't sent to the
Treasury Department, it still lingers for some time in the postal-service
database. Gillum says that by law the postal service will not be able to
destroy suspicious-activity reports for five years.

Gillum says the postal service is very strict that the reports only can be
seen by law-enforcement officials and not used for other purposes such
as
marketing. A spokeswoman for the consulting company Information
Builders

stated in an e-mail to Insight, "Information Builders personnel do not
have
access to this system."

Observers say problems with "Under the Eagle's Eye" underscore the
contradiction that despite the fact that the postal service advertises like
a private business and largely is self-supporting, it still is a government
agency with law-enforcement functions.

Gibson says his agency must set an example for private businesses on
tracking money orders. "Being a government agency, we feel it's our
responsibility that we should set the tone," he said. The Treasury
Department "basically challenged us in the mid-nineties to step up to
the
plate as a government entity," Gillum adds.

In fact, Gillum thinks Treasury may mandate that the private sector
follow
some aspects of the postal-service's program. He adds, however, that
the

postal service is not arguing for this to be imposed on its competitors.

In the meantime, the private sector is getting ready to comply with the
Treasury regulations before they go into effect next January. But if
7-Eleven Inc., which through its franchises and company-owned stores
is one
of the largest sellers of money orders, is any guide, private vendors of

money orders probably will not issue nearly as many suspicious-activity
reports as the postal service. "Our philosophy is to follow what the
regulations require, and if they don't require us to fill out an SAR
[suspicious-activity report] ... then we wouldn't necessarily do it,"
7-Eleven spokeswoman Margaret Chabris tells Insight. Asked
specifically
about customers who cancel or change a transaction when asked to fill
out a
form, Chabris said, "We are not required to fill out an SAR if that
happens." So why does the U.S. Postal Service?

That's one of the major issues raised by critics such as PostalWatch's
Merritt. He says that lawmakers and the new postmaster general, Jack
Potter, need to examine any undermining of customer trust by programs
such
as "Under the Eagle's Eye" before the postal service is allowed to go into
new businesses such as providing e-mail addresses. "Let's hope that
this is
not a trend for the postal service, because I don't think the American
people are quite ready to be fully under the eagle's eye," he says. -

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