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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
January 20, 2007
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. |