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FBI chief likes new facility.
Mueller calls the
L.A. area's Joint Regional Intelligence Center,
opened last summer to help fight terrorism, a model for federal
and local cooperation.
by
Patrick McGreevy, Times Staff Writer
01/20/07
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The Los Angeles area's new counter-terrorism
center drew high marks Friday from FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III,
who toured the high-tech facility in Norwalk and pronounced it a model
for federal and local cooperation.
The Joint Regional Intelligence Center opened six months ago as a
co-venture of the FBI, Los Angeles Police Department, Los Angeles County
Sheriff's Department and other local law enforcement agencies as a hub
for information gathering, analysis and sharing.
With 30 similar centers having opened or in the works in other parts of
the country, Mueller said the use of cutting-edge technology and
intelligence sharing by police officers on the streets of Southern
California sets a good example and gives him confidence about efforts to
head off terrorism here.
"It's a model for the rest of the country," Mueller said. "With the
contribution of first responders and the law enforcement intelligence
component, it's the type of fusion you need to prevent terrorist attacks
and to follow up on any threats of any terrorist attacks."
Mueller said the center is tangible proof of improved cooperation among
agencies in the post-9/11 era. "It enhances our partnership with the Los
Angeles Police Department and Los Angeles [County] Sheriff's
Department," he said. "They are doing a great job."
Mueller was accompanied on the tour and briefing by L.A. Mayor Antonio
Villaraigosa and Police Chief William J. Bratton, who are lobbying
federal officials to expand sharing of federal crime databases with
agencies in Southern California.
The mayor called the center "the crown jewel of our effort to address
counter-terrorism and homeland security here in Los Angeles."
About 30 analysts from federal and local law enforcement agencies work
at the center, which has received about 500 tips from the public and
other sources since opening in July.
Asked whether the center has foiled any terrorist plots since opening,
Bratton said, "I can't speak to the terrorism issue with specificity
other than the fact that since it's been up and running, there have been
no major or significant incidents of concern."
Bratton said the effort to combat terrorism is part of a larger
cooperative venture to have agencies share crime data. Officials from
the LAPD and Sheriff's Department met Thursday with representatives of
dozens of police departments in the county about pooling data through a
computer system called COPLINK. The system is already in use by
the LAPD and Sheriff's Department.
That system would link all the disparate law enforcement databases to
allow analysts at the center and police investigators to call up
information from anywhere in the county, including the names of people
arrested, cited or interviewed by officers or thought to be involved in
crimes.
"It will be helpful to deal with not only terrorism concerns, but also
crime concerns," Bratton said. "It will be a cornerstone of the local
gang initiative we just announced. We will have the ability for the
first time for agencies throughout the county to put information into
the same file."
The police chief said he talked to Mueller on Friday about the desire of
local law enforcement to connect COPLINK to a federal crime
database called Links.
"It would give us access to federal intelligence files, criminal and
terrorism-related, so we would then have the most comprehensive set of
intelligence files in the country," Bratton said.
The chief said he plans a trip to Washington, D.C., to follow up his
talks with Mueller on gaining access to the federal database.
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