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Mass. fuses intelligence
by Dibya Sarkar
05/12/05
Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney announced the creation of
an intelligence fusion center that will integrate and
analyze information from disparate sources statewide to
spot criminal and terrorism patterns.
Officials estimate development and implementation of the
fusion center's system will take six months. The state
signed a contract with Raytheon for integration
services, installation, training and continued support.
A subcontractor, Knowledge Computing, will provide the
COPLINK software for analyzing large volumes of
information from disparate law enforcement databases to
uncover trends and produce leads for investigators.
In the meantime, the Commonwealth Fusion Center is
currently staffed with 15 analysts and 23 intelligence
officers and will operate round-the-clock. There will be
18 analysts by July. The center is expected to be fully
operational in 2007.
"This includes a group of people skilled in analysis of
data, identifying patterns and trends, which again may
be useful in any kind of law enforcement setting, but in
particular our thought with regards to homeland
security," Romney said at a May 11 press conference.
State and local law enforcement mainly protect large
critical assets and respond to attacks, but prevention
is difficult to organize, Romney said. The fusion center
is a step to address that gap.
While he proposed such a center in 2003, Romney also
chaired a 21-member working group -- part of the
Homeland Security Advisory Council, which advises the
Homeland Security Department's secretary -- that issued
a national report in December outlining the roles and
responsibilities of the different levels of government
and private sector in collecting and sharing
intelligence data.
Essentially, the group proposed a plan where various
state and local entities would collect data daily, send
it to regional or state centers, which in turn would
analyze and identify trends related to emerging
terrorist activities and relay such information to the
federal government. The federal authorities would
develop a national picture and relay actionable
intelligence back to state and local authorities.
The Massachusetts State Police is the primary agency
overseeing the fusion center and in partnership with
several other state, local and federal agencies. They
are collaboratively developing an operations plan to be
used statewide once the software is in place. Each of
the five homeland security regional councils in the
state will receive $2 million in state funding to
accomplish this phase. |