Ridge Seeks Fingerprints on Passports
http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=542&u=/ap/20050113/ap_on_go_ca_st_
pe/ridge_fingerprints_10&printer=1

Wed Jan 12,11:00 PM ET

By LARA JAKES JORDAN, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON - Americans' fingerprints should be added to their passports,
outgoing Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge said Wednesday, hoping to
include the United States in a growing global security standard but risking
a privacy fight at home.

Ridge said passports could ideally include biometric finger scans � for all
10 fingers � to help customs officials quickly and accurately identify U.S.
travelers. He offered no details on how the plan might deal with privacy
concerns or guard against international identity theft.

"If we're going to ask the rest of the world to put fingerprints on their
passports, we ought to put our fingerprints on our passports," Ridge said in
a speech at the Center for Strategic and International Studies before
heading overseas to talk about security ties with the European Union (news -
web sites).

"Now, culturally, historically, there are a lot of reasons that some
countries are averse or very reluctant to give people finger scans," Ridge
said. He said that by offering assurances that use would be limited and
benefits would be significant, "we could get the world to move more quickly
toward a common international standard."

The department has no immediate proposal to add fingerprints to U.S.
passports, spokesman Brian Roehrkasse said. Ridge is scheduled to step down
Feb. 1.

The U.S. government began fingerprinting and photographing visitors from
other counties � including staunch allies � after the Sept. 11, 2001, terror
attacks. Most nations cautiously supported the added scrutiny, but Brazil
last year retaliated by fingerprinting and photographing arriving Americans,
delaying their travel for hours.

Including Americans' fingerprints on their passports also is a subject of
debate within the U.S. government. The State Department will begin issuing
new electronic or biometric passports within a few months, containing a
microchip holding a citizen's name, birth date and photo. But while the chip
will be able to include fingerprints, none are planned at this point.

At issue is the extent the passport chips would be encrypted to prevent
government snooping or identity theft. The Bush administration has so far
resisted encrypting digital passport information, which could prevent
international customs officials from reading the data.

But privacy advocates say such personal information can be read from as far
away as 30 feet by using sophisticated data readers.

"Without good encryption, there's a big risk of biometric pollution," said
Peter P. Swire, an Ohio State University law professor who served as the
Clinton administration's chief privacy counselor. "That can breed identity
theft because now the bad guys can forge your fingerprint as well as your
Social Security (news - web sites) number. You can change your Social
Security number, but it's really hard to change your thumbprint."

The debate comes in the wake of the Sept. 11 Commission report, which
highlighted falsified passports as a serious problem for national security.

House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Chris Cox said Wednesday he
agrees with the need for an international passport standard that could
include fingerprint data, but he also said protective encryption "is
essential. It is not an expense."

Even with encryption measures, many people are sure to object to having
their fingerprints added to a government database.

"People are going to feel that they're being surveyed as they never have
been before," said Ari Schwartz, associate director of the Center for
Democracy and Technology in Washington. "And there is going to be an active
concern about that."

___

AP Diplomatic Writer Barry Schweid contributed to this report.




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