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For Immediate Release
January 18, 2007
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Washington D.C.
FBI National Press Office
(202) 324-3691
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NCIC
CELEBRATES 40 YEARS
Clarksburg,
WV - A celebration to commemorate the 40th anniversary of
the FBI's National Crime Information Center (NCIC) will
be held at the Criminal Justice Information Services (CJIS)
Division, in Clarksburg, West Virginia, on January 26, 2007.
Cartha D. "Deke" DeLoach, former FBI Deputy Director
under J. Edgar Hoover, will be the keynote speaker for this
event.
NCIC
became operational on January 27, 1967 with the goal of
assisting law enforcement by providing a national ability
to apprehend fugitives and locate stolen property. During
its first year of operation, NCIC was hailed as a great
success while processing a modest 2 ½ million transactions
for the entire year. Currently, NCIC processes an average
of more than 5.5 million transactions per day and recently
set a record on January 4, 2007 with 6,486,744.
CJIS
Division Assistant Director Thomas E. Bush III said, "As
NCIC reaches its 40th year of operation, we can proudly
look back to the amazing results it has produced including
countless lives that have been saved. At the same time we
look forward to a bright future by enhancing our capabilities
as technology continues to emerge. I want to thank our criminal
justice partners who rely on NCIC daily to do their jobs
more effectively. I also want to recognize the Advisory
Policy Board. They are a representation of all the users.
They work collaboratively to establish best practices and
improve overall service. It would be hard to find a more
reliable, widely used, and important law enforcement tool
than NCIC over the last 40 years."
For
40 years, records residing in NCIC have promptly aided law
enforcement at all levels in tracking fugitives, missing
persons, and stolen property. As a central clearinghouse
of criminal justice information, NCIC produces success stories
on a daily basis. Imagine a police department enters an
arrest warrant into a computer database only to discover
the subject had been queried upon earlier by another police
department more than 1,500 miles away. That's exactly what
transpired a few weeks ago when a bank robber wanted in
Arkansas for capital murder charges was located in California
as a result of a "delayed inquiry notification"
from NCIC.
NCIC
is a computerized database of documented criminal justice
information available to virtually every law enforcement
agency nationwide, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. NCIC
serves more than 90,000 criminal justice and law enforcement
agencies by providing information which can assist in apprehending
fugitives, locating missing persons, locating and returning
stolen property, and identifying terrorists and their supporters.
It also provides protection for law enforcement personnel
and for the public.
Criminal justice agencies enter records into the NCIC, which
are subsequently accessible to law enforcement agencies
nationwide. For example, during a routine traffic stop,
a law enforcement officer can conduct an inquiry into NCIC
to determine if the vehicle is stolen or if the driver is
a wanted person. The NCIC system responds instantly if a
match is found. The inquiring agency is required to contact
the entering agency to verify that the information is accurate
and up-to-date.
NCIC
2000 became operational on July 11, 1999, and enhanced the
base capabilities of the legacy system as well as added
important new files. Some of the new capabilities include:
the ability to accept, store, and retrieve digital images;
expanded fields; and the delayed inquiry notification. The
delayed inquiry provides a capability for the system to
automatically extract certain descriptive data from entries
and use it to search the transaction log for inquiries conducted
up to five days prior to the entry. Notifications are sent
to both the entering and inquiring agency for further investigation.
The
NCIC operates under a shared management concept between
the FBI and local, tribal, state and federal criminal justice
agencies. The FBI maintains the host computer while providing
a telecommunication network to the CJIS Systems Agency (CSA)
in each of the 50 states, the District of Columbia, the
U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, and Canada, as well as federal
criminal justice agencies. In turn, each CSA provides a
telecommunication network which allows access to virtually
all local criminal justice agencies. Through this cooperative
network, law enforcement personnel have direct on-line access
to enter and search millions of records for persons and
property.
A
system that began with only 5 separate Files of information
has expanded to include 18 Files of crucial information
on missing persons, terrorists, immigration violators, convicted
sexual offenders and victims of identity theft. A recent
survey determined that a wanted person hit is confirmed
in NCIC every 90 seconds. Today, NCIC truly operates as
the backbone of information sharing among the law enforcement
community.
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