Additional Aliens PIA

privacy_pia_usvisit_addl aliens.pdf

Biometric Identity

Additional Aliens PIA

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Privacy Impact Assessment Update
for the

United States Visitor and Immigrant Status
Indicator Technology (US-VISIT) Program
In conjunction with the Final Rule (73 FR 77473), Enrollment
of Additional Aliens in US-VISIT
February 10, 2009
Contact Point
Paul Hasson, Acting Privacy Officer
US-VISIT
(202) 298-5200
Reviewing Official
John W. Kropf
Acting Chief Privacy Officer
Department of Homeland Security
(703) 235-0780

Privacy Impact Assessment Update 
Page 2 

Abstract
The United States Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology (US-VISIT) Program
is an integrated, automated biometric entry-exit system that records the arrival and departure of
aliens; conducts certain terrorist, criminal, and immigration violation checks on aliens; and
compares biometric identifiers to those collected on previous encounters to verify identity. USVISIT is publishing this Privacy Impact Assessment (PIA) update in connection with the
publication of the final rule to expand US-VISIT biometric collection requirements to cover
additional classes of aliens. Under the final rule, effective January 18, 2009, 2008, US-VISIT will
have the authority to process all aliens not explicitly exempted, with the exception of those
Canadian citizens applying for admission as B-1/B-2 visitors for business or pleasure. 1

Introduction
The United States Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology (US-VISIT) Program
is an integrated, automated biometric entry-exit system that records the arrival and departure of
aliens; conducts certain terrorist, criminal, and immigration violation checks on aliens; and
compares biometric identifiers to those collected on previous encounters to verify identity. USVISIT has been implemented in stages, with each stage adding additional capabilities, locations of
implementation, or populations. For each stage, US-VISIT has published a Privacy Impact
Assessment (PIA), or an update that describes changes to the program from previous PIAs.
This PIA updates the US-VISIT PIA that analyzed the expansion of US-VISIT to cover
additional categories of aliens, which was published on July 12, 2006, in support of a Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) on the Authority to Process Additional Aliens in US-VISIT. 2 That
PIA describes changes to the US-VISIT Program to extend US-VISIT biometric collection
requirements to any alien (subject to specific exemptions as described below), with the exception
of those Canadian citizens applying for admission as B-1/B-2 visitors for business or pleasure. The
expansion to cover additional categories of aliens will be implemented with the addition of one or
more additional categories of aliens as technological and operational resources permit. US-VISIT is
publishing this PIA update to accompany the Final Rule on the Authority to Process Additional
Aliens in US-VISIT. The final rule does not differ from the NPRM in any manner that would affect
privacy; therefore, US-VISIT identified no additional privacy risks.
                                                           
1 On January 16, 2009 US‐VISIT published technical revisions to the original rule published in December.  
The revisions did not affect the substance of the rule.  The revisions can be found at 74 FR 2837. 
2 All US‐VISIT PIAs are available for review on the DHS Privacy Office Web site – 
http://www.dhs.gov/xinfoshare/publications/editorial_0511.shtm#13. The US‐VISIT PIA Update, 
dated July 12, 2006, which specifically identifies the inclusion of additional aliens into the program, 
can be found at: http://www.dhs.gov/xlibrary/assets/privacy/privacy_pia_usvisit_addaliens.pdf.

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Privacy Impact Analysis
On July 12, 2006, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) published a PIA update in
support of the NPRM published on July 27, 2006. The NPRM and PIA were published to modify
US-VISIT regulations to provide that any alien may be processed through US-VISIT (subject to
specific exemptions 3 ), with the exception of those Canadian citizens applying for admission as B1/B-2 visitors for business or pleasure. 4 Several large classes of aliens will be affected by this
change including:
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U.S. Lawful Permanent Residents (LPRs)
Aliens seeking admission on immigrant visas
Refugees and asylees
Certain Canadian citizens who receive a Form I-94 at inspection or who require waivers of
inadmissibility
Aliens paroled into the United States
Aliens applying for admission under the Guam Visa Waiver Program

DHS received 69 comments in response to the July 27, 2006, NPRM. Twelve of these
raised privacy issues. With regard to privacy, the comments received highlighted concerns in four
areas: “mission creep,” or concern that US-VISIT was expanding beyond its original purpose in a
way that individuals who had participated in US-VISIT were not made aware of the full scope of
the program; lack of right of judicial review for individuals affected by US-VISIT; privacy during
the inspection process; and false hits, which occur on individuals incorrectly identified as subjects
of interest.
Of the four areas of concern, the majority of comments focused on mission creep. That is,
there was concern as to whether the US-VISIT Program was expanding beyond its scope as
articulated in previous privacy and regulatory publications. As noted above, the US-VISIT Program
has been implemented in stages, with each stage adding additional locations, capabilities, or
covered populations. However, it has always been the case—and it is the statutory mandate—that
US-VISIT cover all aliens entering and exiting the United States. The initial language described the
US-VISIT-covered population as visitors or travelers, which may not have been previously viewed
as including such groups of aliens as LPRs. Nevertheless, all of the authorizing statutes refer to
“aliens” without differentiation. In addition, mission creep concerns were raised around the issue
of using the information for law enforcement purposes. However, it is clear in the statutory
language authorizing US-VISIT, as well as the regulatory and privacy publications, that US-VISIT
                                                           
3 The following categories of aliens are expressly exempt by regulation from US-VISIT biometric collection
requirements: aliens admitted on A-1, A-2, C-3, G-1, G-2, G-3, G-4, NATO-1, NATO-3, NATO-4, NATO-5, or
NATO-6 visas; children under the age of 14; persons over the age of 79; and certain officials of the Taipei Economic
and Cultural Representative Office and members of their immediate families seeking admission on E-1 visas.
 71 FR 42605 

4

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has national security and immigration law enforcement purposes, inasmuch as it coordinates with
other DHS components that have specific law enforcement authority, such as U.S. Customs and
Border Protection (CBP) and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
The second privacy concern was that DHS should offer a right of judicial review for
individuals adversely affected by US-VISIT. DHS and the Department of Justice have consistently
maintained that a determination of inadmissibility is excluded from judicial review and reviewable
only pursuant to other statutory and regulatory provisions. See, e.g., section 240 of the
Immigration and Naturalization Act (8 U.S.C. 1229a). However, if an individual believes that
there is an error in the information contained in a DHS system that was collected through the USVISIT process, DHS has provided a redress process to have records reviewed and amended or
corrected based on accuracy, relevancy, timeliness, or completeness. This process includes
confirming that mismatches and other errors are not retained as part of an alien’s record. The first
opportunity for data correction occurs at the port of entry, where CBP officers have the ability to
manually correct most biographic errors, such as name, date of birth, flight information, and
document errors.
There may be cases where individuals are no longer at the port of entry but believe that
their data may be incorrect. For these situations, DHS has developed and implemented a
centralized and well-publicized redress process, the Traveler Redress Inquiry Program (TRIP),
which is described in detail online at www.dhs.gov/trip. TRIP provides persons with a fast and
easy way to review personal information collected about them; to have information corrected as
appropriate; and, if desired, to appeal redress decisions to the DHS Chief Privacy Officer. While
millions of people have interacted with US-VISIT identity management services, US-VISIT has
received only 437 petitions for redress out of more than 95 million encounters. Furthermore, the
vast majority of these have largely centered on requests for information about the program, or
were attempts to correct information to ensure that persons were not routinely selected for
secondary inspection.
The third privacy issue was that, to enhance a covered individual’s privacy, anyone sent to
secondary inspection for purposes related to US-VISIT should be placed in a line separate and apart
from those sent to secondary for other purposes. However, at the time that an individual is sent to
secondary, the CBP officer does not know definitively whether the reason is related to US-VISIT or
some other factor. Initial studies have determined, however, that the incidence of travelers being
identified incorrectly as “watchlist hits” by US-VISIT and being referred to secondary as a result is
low. At the time of publication and during the public comment period, this occurred less than
one-tenth of 1 percent of the time anyone was sent to secondary.
The final privacy issue was that US-VISIT needs to be modified to reduce the impact of
false hits—individuals who are incorrectly identified as watchlist hits. DHS is actively attempting

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to decrease the likelihood of false hits with frequent upgrades of matching algorithms,
technologies, and processes.
Risks Identified in Previous PIA
Data Collection
DHS is not collecting additional types of data from the US-VISIT-covered population; the
covered population itself is growing. US-VISIT systems will face new performance and operational
challenges because of the expanding covered population. However, this is a quantitative rather
than qualitative change to an existing privacy risk. DHS mitigates the privacy risk of this expansion
by expanding biometric-matching system capabilities with extensive security measures to protect
US-VISIT systems; and through additional system education and training, policies, and procedures
provided to users in handling this data.
Data Use
There are no new uses of data based on the changes to US-VISIT necessitating this PIA.
However, there is a potential privacy risk because an incorrect decision may be made based on
potentially inaccurate data from the transfer of historical U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
(USCIS) data in the DHS Automated Biometric Identification System (IDENT). To mitigate such a
risk, US-VISIT uses a quality assurance process to identify any errors in properly matching
individuals with relevant records (e.g., special checks targeted at specific data elements exhibiting
a statistically significant tendency to cause matching errors).
Data Disclosure
Nevertheless, any sharing of data, whether internal or external, increases the potential for
compromising that data and creates new opportunities for misuse. US-VISIT mitigates these
vulnerabilities by working closely with sharing organizations to develop secure standard operating
procedures for sharing this data. These procedures are documented in sharing agreements. In all
cases of sharing internal to DHS, all organization are required to comply with the Department’s
security policies and procedures.

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Conclusion
Considering all of the comments DHS received, and specifically the comments received
with regard to privacy issues, DHS is adopting the proposed rule of July 27, 2006, as the final rule
and so will include the additional categories of aliens, as described above, as US-VISIT-covered
persons.

Responsible Official
Paul Hasson, Acting Privacy Officer
US-VISIT
Department of Homeland Security

Approval Signature

Original signed copy on file with the DHS Privacy Office
John W. Kropf
Acting Chief Privacy Officer
Department of Homeland Security

 


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