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ATTORNEY GENERAL ASHCROFT ANNOUNCES IMPLEMENTATION OF THE FIRST PHASE OF THE NATIONAL SECURITY
WASHINGTON, DC- Attorney General John Ashcroft announced that the first
phase of the National Security Entry-Exit Registration System (NSEERS) will be
implemented by the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) at selected
ports of entry throughout the United States on September 11, 2002. After an
initial 20-day period for testing and evaluating the system at selected ports
of entry, all remaining ports of entry -- including land, air and sea -- will
have the new system in place on October 1, 2002.
Congress required in the USA PATRIOT Act that the Justice Department develop
an entry-exit system in order to provide greater protection for the United
States and help aliens fulfill their responsibilities under the laws of the
United States. The NSEERS program is the first step toward the development of
a comprehensive entry-exit system applicable to virtually all foreign
visitors.
Under the NSEERS program, the fingerprints of a small percentage of entering
foreign visitors will be matched against a database of known criminals and a
database of known terrorists. These visitors will be selected according to
intelligence criteria reflecting patterns of terrorist organizations'
activities. During a pilot project using the same fingerprint technology to
identify wanted criminals attempting to re-enter the United States, the
results have been extremely positive. The INS has been receiving an average of
more than 70 fingerprint "hits" a week, resulting in the arrest of more than
2,000 wanted felons from January through July 2002.
In addition to requiring the fingerprinting of higher-risk visiting aliens at
the port of entry, the NSEERS program will require the same individuals to
periodically confirm where they are living and what they are doing in the
United States, as well as to confirm their exit from the country. This
practice of requiring foreign visitors to periodically register with law
enforcement authorities has long been commonplace in European countries.
U.S. law has long required aliens who stay in the United States for more than
30 days to be registered and fingerprinted. However, such requirements have
been suspended for decades, with respect to most visiting foreign nationals.
The NSEERS program will put registration and fingerprinting requirements back
in place, along with exit controls, for the following visitors to the United
States:
All nationals of Iran, Iraq, Libya, Sudan and Syria
Nonimmigrant aliens whom the State Department determines to present an
elevated national security risk, based on criteria reflecting current
intelligence
Aliens identified by INS inspectors at the port of entry, using similar
criteria
"The vulnerabilities of our immigration system became starkly clear on
September 11th," said Ashcroft. "This system will expand substantially
America's scrutiny of those foreign visitors who may present an elevated
national security risk. And it will provide a vital line of defense in the war
against terrorism. I thank the INS for their diligent work in getting this
critical system up and running in such a short period of time."
The Attorney General announced the proposed rule of the National Security
Entry Exit System on June 6, 2002. The final rule was published on August 12,
2002. It will take effect on September 11, 2002. ### 02-466 Follow @ilwcom Share this page | Bookmark this page The leading immigration law publisher - over 50000 pages of free information!
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