March 21, 2011
FBI center takes on $1 billion ID project
By Eric Eyre
http://wvgazette.com/News/Business/201103211014

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- The Clarksburg FBI complex is taking part in a $1 billion 
project that will enable law enforcement agencies to identify criminals and 
terrorists by physical characteristics more quickly and accurately, an FBI 
official said Monday in Charleston.

Earlier this month, the FBI center unveiled its "Next Generation Identification 
System," which will slowly replace an older system that can no longer handle 
the volume of fingerprints sent to Clarksburg.

"It's bigger, better, faster," said Stephen Morris, a deputy assistant director 
at the FBI Center. "It increases capacity and accuracy."

Morris spoke Monday at a Charleston Rotary Club luncheon at the Civic Center.

The NGI system, built by Lockheed Martin, allows FBI employees to conduct 
automated fingerprint searches and exchange information with more than 18,000 
law enforcement agencies.

The FBI's fingerprint examining staff also received new "advanced technology 
workstations" that will help increase accuracy, Morris said.

Under the system, state and local police officers also will eventually use 
hand-held devices to scan suspects' fingerprints and send the images 
electronically to the FBI center.

"It's a quick scan to let police officers know if they should let the person 
go, or take him into custody," Morris said.

In later stages, NGI system also will be expanded to include the analysis of 
palm prints, handwriting, faces, human irises and voices.

"Our job is to study those and see how reliable they are for law enforcement," 
Morris said.

The FBI plans to increase the size of the Clarksburg complex significantly with 
the opening of a new 350,000-square-foot Biometric Technology Center in 2014, 
Morris said. The FBI plans to share the facility with the U.S. Department of 
Defense.

The FBI center, which opened in 1995, now has about 2,500 full-time workers and 
another 500 contract employees.

The center analyzes and identifies nearly 168,000 fingerprints a day on 
average. The fingerprints are used to solve investigations, prevent crime and 
identify criminals and terrorists.

Reach Eric Eyre at [email protected] or 304-348-4869.
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