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Intelligence database worrying some R.G. Ratcliffe AUSTIN — After a commercial airline pilot testified before a government agency against the construction of a nuclear power plant, the Department of Public Safety intelligence division investigated him as a potential terrorist who might fly his passenger-loaded airplane into such a plant. The First Unitarian Church of Dallas hosted talks by a gay-rights group and was labeled by DPS intelligence as the "sponsor of radical-left groups." The manager of a West Texas Chamber of Commerce announced that he would challenge the House Appropriations Committee chairman's re-election. The man immediately lost his job, and the DPS created a dossier on him and his wife that was circulated at the Capitol. The DPS at the time was building a massive intelligence computer database on Texas residents that would be shared among law enforcement agencies. Then-Gov. Dolph Briscoe put a halt to it, saying it appeared to lack safeguards against an invasion of privacy.
(Article continues below) All of that occurred in 1974 and embarrassed the DPS nationally. The agency destroyed the intelligence files and apologized to the Dallas church. But now the scandal is all but forgotten, and some civil libertarians fear that it could be repeated. In the current world of terrorist threats, the Legislature this year expanded police surveillance powers and declined to put tighter controls on an intelligence computer database being built at the insistence of Gov. Rick Perry's office. Political aspect
Perry's director of homeland security, Steve McCraw — the driving force behind the Texas Data Exchange (TDEx) computer — declined to be interviewed. Perry spokeswoman Katherine Cesinger said the computer is meant to be nothing more than a centralized system to allow law enforcement agencies across Texas to share data that already is being kept by individual police and sheriff's departments. "It really is just a fundamental 9-11 Commission finding that law enforcement needs to share information at the state and local level and federal level. This allows that information sharing," Cesinger said. The computer is located at DPS but is managed by personnel under McCraw in the governor's division of emergency management. The database is kept by a private company, Apriss Inc., on a computer in Kentucky. "We continue to be deeply concerned about the governor's office having a hand in TDEx and the database being outside the state of Texas," said Rebecca Bernhardt of the American Civil Liberties Union of Texas. Looking at the past
Former state Sen. A.R. "Babe" Schwartz, D-Galveston, led the investigation into DPS intelligence gathering. In a recent interview, Schwartz said the pilot's case was far from the only one. "They have a vast repertoire of records on citizens," Schwartz said. "They collected pure hearsay. They collected accounts from people who wanted to defame other people." One of the dossiers kept by DPS was on a former three-term Texas House member from Houston, Curtis Graves. The information was gathered from anonymous sources and included a list of people he sang with while drinking in a Houston tavern. At the time of the scandal, DPS was preparing to build an interagency computer file on Texas residents. Briscoe said he was afraid it would contain noncriminal material that should not be housed in a database without residents' consent. "Where it's necessary to get the consent of anyone involved, and I think that's proper, I rather doubt it's practical," Briscoe said. Needed tool
But the report also said protecting civil liberties may be a major problem with such intelligence gathering. It quoted National Intelligence Director Mike McConnell as saying, "The intelligence community has an obligation to better identify and counter threats to Americans while still safeguarding their privacy. The task is inherently a difficult one." Cesinger, Perry's spokeswoman, said the governor is not concerned about potential misuse of the state databases because he believes law enforcement will use it properly. "Our law enforcement officials are reasonable and rational, and collecting information should be seen as a positive thing," Cesinger said. "Sharing this information will maximize the knowledge of our law enforcement officers who are trying to protect public safety."
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