UNITED24 - Make a charitable donation in support of Ukraine!

Homeland Security

SLUG: 5-52839 Terror Technology / What's in a Name?
DATE:
NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=01/09/03

TYPE=BACKGROUND REPORT

TITLE=TERROR TECHNOLOGY / WHAT'S IN A NAME?

NUMBER=5-52839

BYLINE=LAURIE KASSMAN

DATELINE=WASHINGTON

INTERNET=YES

CONTENT=

INTRO: U-S anti-terrorism rules require airlines and immigration services to check traveler's names against an ever-expanding list of terror suspects and criminals. But how can you match a foreign name when that name can be spelled many different ways in English? Correspondent Laurie Kassman takes a look at the technology that tackles the problem.

TEXT: Last November Pakistani-born Mir Aimal Kasi was executed for the 1993 murder of two employees of the Central Intelligence Agency.

He had entered the United States a few years earlier undetected -- even though his name was on a terrorist watch list.

/// HERMANSEN ACT ///

He got a visa, crossed the border, purchased an A-K-47 and shot five people in front of the C-I-A. His name was on all the watch lists. He was a persona non grata in the United States but because of the difference of one letter in his name, he was able to do all those things, get a visa, cross the border, pass the gun check. So that's probably the best-documented and most egregious case of what happens when we don't pay attention to the issue of personal names.

/// END ACT ///

John Hermansen, co-founder of the Virginia-based Language Analysis Systems, has developed a name reference library and name-search software to help prevent such slips in the future.

Understandably, the demand for name-search technology soared after the 2001 terrorist attack against the World Trade Center.

The key to a thorough search, Mr. Hermansen says, is understanding the culture of the name and the information it contain.

/// HERMANSEN ACT TWO ///

A name can tell you the gender of a person, maybe the religion, social status of that person. Something about family or marriages or siblings is indicated in some cultures. You can find out what country the name is commonly used in.

/// END ACT ///

Over the past two decades Mr. Hermansen's company has complied a reference library of more than one billion names from just about every country in the world.

But that is not enough. Mr. Hermansen and others working in the field have put together lists of name variables to facilitate the search for a match.

/// HERMANSEN ACT THREE ///

So you'll see the name like Mohamed, always spelled the same way in Arabic. We have almost 200 variations of it in our data base that have shown up that people would want to match if they found that the other names in the string also matched. So as names are heard and written down, you have names like Abd el Rahman that's really pronounced more fluently so it may occur all as one string. Those two forms of that name would have to be also matched.

/// END ACT ///

/// OPT /// Knowing the origin of the name can help a bank or an I-N-S agent detect a fraud.

/// HERMANSEN ACT FOUR ///

For instance, in a Russian name at the end you would see a Romanov spelled with a 'v' or 'o-f-f' but never with a 'p-h'.

/// END ACT /// /// END OPT ///

The C-I-A and the F-B-I are relying more on such extensive name-search systems in their hunt for terrorists. So is the I-N-S, which has to vet immigrants and non-immigrants entering the country. Airlines and banks now are required to check customer names against terrorist watch lists too.

Richard Wagner runs the New York-based Intelligent Search Technology firm, which provides computer technology to speed the data base search.

/// START OPT ///Using my name as an example, he shows just how fast the search can be.

/// OPT WAGNER ACT ///

I've just typed the name into a name field and I'm about to press the 'run' button. When you press the 'run' button essentially what happens is you're asking the system to go out and perform a search. I just performed the search and you'll be delighted to know that you do not exist on any of the terrorist lists.

/// END OPT ACT /// ///END OPT ///

Mr. Wagner says companies and law enforcement agencies can check about four thousand names a second, including different spellings or nicknames.

///WAGNER ACT TWO ///

When they type in Bill Clinton, should he be on any of the database lists, they'd wouldn't only find Bill Clinton, they'd find Billy Clintons and William Jefferson Clintons.

/// END ACT ///

Investigators also are using name search systems to help trace the money trail of suspected terrorists.

But the technology has other practical applications too.

Mr. Hermansen of Language Analysis Systems says companies also use the search tools to help identify target markets -- like women or minorities. He says the information they need to do that is in the name. (Signed)

NEB/LMK/KBK



NEWSLETTER
Join the GlobalSecurity.org mailing list