FBI Computer System Still A
Financial Sinkhole
March 19. 2010
FBI Director Robert S. Mueller (Photo credit: Stephanie Woodrow)
The New York Times has announced
The FBI's long awaited computer
system has hit the wall again. Unbelievable! The Judiciary Report's
sister site, the Sound Off Column, wrote a series of articles beginning
in June 2006, www.soundoffcolumn.com/june_06.htm
warning of future trouble with the FBI's planned computer system.
The Sound Off Column even detailed methods of creating
and implementing a computer system for the FBI that was a mere fraction
of the cost being tossed around in Congress and would require far less
time. America has some of the biggest computer companies in
the world, yet Mueller has the nation's main law enforcement agency
looking like they start fires with rocks and sticks, instead of matches.
Four years after the Sound Off Column articles, warning
the FBI to change course in how it announced it would go about acquiring
a computer system and $1 billion dollars later in taxpayer money and the
FBI's computer system is delayed once again with more problems cropping
up.
The Sound Off Column warned the system would be useless
if it was implemented over years, rather than weeks or a few short
months, as the speed of technology is as such, one year down the road,
manufacturers will have released their latest innovations, making older
models obsolete.
However, site reader, FBI Director Robert S. Mueller,
clearly thinks he knows more than me about computers, when he nearly
fell for an identity theft scam via an email link he nearly clicked,
thus he went about the computer system the long and wrong way. Now they
are sitting on scrap metal, er, I mean outdated computers, with old
operating systems and slower peripherals, much of which have not even
been implemented.
I have a bridge I'd like to sell Mueller, because he is
just that gullible that he would buy just about anything. This wouldn't
be so sad if the country was not facing an unprecedented rise in
terrorism, both domestically and internationally.
Having a great, cutting edge computer system, makes a
big difference in law enforcement matters. Technology can be used to
prevent crime and boost productivity, but some people just don't grasp
that. Robert S. Mueller is one of those people. Hence, the FBI being so
slow and inefficient with cases, even when people's lives are at stake.
Side Bar: you still haven't accounted for
hundreds of millions of dollars from the computer system money that went
missing and was labeled "miscellaneous." Do we have to guess
which off shore accounts that embezzled taxpayer money is sitting in.
You better be glad I'm not President, because your butt would be in
prison.
STORY SOURCE
Massive FBI computer overhaul is put on ice
(again)
Carrier pigeons still viable
Posted in Government, 19th March 2010 20:35 GMT - The FBI has once again
suspended work on parts of a massive computer overhaul that many say is
vital to fighting crime and terrorism.
Putting the project known as Sentinel on hold has alarmed some on
Capitol Hill because the upgrade was considered vital to shoring-up
deficiencies in key areas, The New York Times reports. Several years
ago, FBI computer systems were so poor that many agents couldn't send or
receive email and had difficulty getting case histories or tapping other
databases.
Following the September 11 terrorist attacks, agents in Florida had to
send their counterparts in Washington, DC, photographs of the hijackers
by overnight mail because they couldn't send email attachments.
http://www.theregister.co.uk
F.B.I. Faces New Setback in Computer Overhaul
Published: March 18, 2010 - WASHINGTON —
The Federal Bureau of Investigation has suspended work on parts of its
huge computer overhaul, dealing the agency the latest costly setback in
a decade-long effort to develop a modernized information system to
combat crime and terrorism. The overhaul was supposed to be completed
this fall, but now will not be done until next year at the earliest. The
delay could mean at least $30 million in cost overruns on a project
considered vital to national security, Congressional officials
said...
The officials said the decision to suspend
work on other parts of the program reflected the lessons learned from
previous setbacks. When Lockheed Martin won the contract, the F.B.I.
ended the previous computer overhaul and started over because the
problems had grown too big to fix. Robert S. Mueller III, director of the F.B.I.,
acknowledged problems in the project when he was asked about it at a
House appropriations hearing on Wednesday...
While the F.B.I. described the problems as
a minor setback, Congressional officials said they were alarmed.
http://www.nytimes.com
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