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Academic Journals
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 18, Issue 23)The FBI's National Crime Information Center 2000, a crime-fighting information network, hiccuped a little after its initial implementation on July 11. Integration with the National Instant Criminal Background Check...
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 9, Issue 22)The Federal Bureau of Investigation has become expert at setting up communications systems linking the site of an incident with headquarters. One such instance was the Lockerbie, Scotland air disaster where FBI agents...
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 16, Issue 8)The FBI has revised its implementation schedule for the database upgrade to its National Crime Information Center (NCIC), establishing Jul 1999 as the new target date. Congress has been critical of the FBI's NCIC 2000...
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 18, Issue 1)When the National Instant Criminal Background Check System went on line at 9 a m, Nov 30, the response was overwhelming. One gun dealer called asking for 99 background checks on prospective gun buyers. That call took...
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 9, Issue 22)The Federal Bureau of Investigation is asking Congress for $80 million to completely overhaul its National Crime Information Center (NCIC) data base. The current system has been in place since 1968, and will process an...
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 12, Issue 7)Harris Corp wins a three-year, $46.9 million contract to upgrade the FBI's National Crime Information Center (NCIC) national criminal database. NCIC first went online in 1967, and most of its software is written in...
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From:The FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin (Vol. 69, Issue 7)In 1968, the FBI searched its new computer system to identify fugitives whose fingerprints might match a latent print taken from the gun that killed Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. The search revealed 1,200 possibilities. A...
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From:The FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin (Vol. 68, Issue 10)The FBI unveiled two new systems designed to make catching criminals easier for local law enforcement. The National Crime Information Center (NCIC) 2000, which came online July 11, 1999, replaced the FBI's NCIC system....
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 10, Issue 21)The US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) issues a request for proposals for the National Crime Information Center (NCIC) upgrade but does not allow public disclosure of the system requirements. NCIC 2000 has been...
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From:The FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin (Vol. 78, Issue 6)The National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) Section of the FBI's Criminal Justice Information Services Division has completed 10 years of operation. NICS, created as the result of an amendment to the...
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 21, Issue 11)Gary Piedmont of Reynoldsburg, Ohio, was sentenced to 30 days of community confinement, a $5,000 fine and a year of probation for using the FBI's National Crime Information Center system to check whether a warrant had...
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 18, Issue 24)The FBI last week launched the Integrated Automated Fingerprint Identification System at its Clarksburg, W.Va., facility. IAFIS has interfaces with the National Instant Criminal Background Check System for firearms...
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From:American Libraries (Vol. 19, Issue 4)The FBI's controversial "Library Awareness Program is more widespread than previously known, and the FBI claims that librarians have been recruited by foreign agents, according to a recently obtained -transcript of a...
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 18, Issue 21)Over the past six months, gun dealers nationwide sold about 1,687 firearms to buyers who should have been disqualified after their names were submitted for a review by the FBI's National Instant Criminal Background...
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 19, Issue 18)Congress mandated the creation of NICS in 1994. The FBI worked with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, and state and local law enforcement agencies to develop the system. The computerized background check...
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 19, Issue 24)Bureau says addition of interfaces to other systems caused a hiccup in the background check system Concerns about gun safety, congressional pressure and heat from firearms vendors are pushing the FBI to improve its...
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From:The Chronicle of Higher Education (Vol. 52, Issue 34)DURING HIS LIFE and career as a muckraking journalist in Washington, Jack Anderson cultivated secret sources throughout the halls of government--sources who passed on information that allowed Anderson to investigate and...
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From:The FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin (Vol. 67, Issue 2)DNA profiling techniques are useful in providing information which can be used as evidence to convict a criminal. DNA profiles from evidence that is gathered in the scene of the crime can be analyzed to determine their...
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 7, Issue 9)Clifford Stoll, a computer manager at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, and Leroy Kerth, Lawrence Berkeley's associate director, recount their efforts to identify a West German who intruded into over 30 government computer...
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From:The FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin (Vol. 62, Issue 11)FBI statistics show that some 14.4 million criminal offenses were reported to law enforcement agencies across the US, representing an average of 5,660 crimes for every 100,000 inhabitants. The total number of crimes...