Border and Enforcement News
At a speech last week in
Washington, Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Robert Bonner announced
an immigration security initiative that will send inspectors to airports abroad
to screen visitors coming to the United States by plane.
This pilot program will begin within the month of May in Warsaw
International Airport. The mission
of the initiative, according to Bonner, will be detecting security risks and
immigration fraud.
Customs and Border Protection
will measure the success of the initiative in six months and plans to extend it
to other airports. Bonner said
countries and airports are voluntarily obliging and Warsaw International was the
first to ask to participate.
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U.S. officials told Reuters
last week that the U.S. is planning on giving the world police body Interpol
information on about 400,000 lost or stolen U.S. passports to increase security.
The passports involved were each issued to someone who later reported
them lost or stolen, rather than blank U.S. passports, which U.S. officials say
seldom go missing.
Interpol officials told
Reuters that Interpol’s database contains serial numbers of 1.1 million stolen
travel documents of which 188,609 were black papers in which individuals can
insert photographs, descriptions and aliases, therefore posing a special risk.
A new system will enable police and immigration officials to check
whether a travel document is stolen by simply typing its number into a computer.
Disclaimer: This newsletter is provided as a public service and not intended to establish an attorney client relationship. Any reliance on information contained herein is taken at your own risk.