Brian Doherty | January 29, 2004
And former Gov. Mike Leavitt didn't even inform the state legislature, according to this Deseret News account. Full story also contains some decent background on progress in the MATRIX program. An excerpt:
Gov. Olene Walker...on Wednesday requested that the Utah Department of Public Safety provide her more information on MATRIX.
"It does appear to be something that began under Gov. Leavitt," said Walker's spokeswoman, Amanda Covington, who added, "Gov. Walker is very concerned about individual privacy, but she has been assured by the Department of Public Safety that is not an issue with MATRIX."
....
House and Senate leaders either had never heard of MATRIX or, if the name was familiar, had no idea that conservatives and civil libertarians had any concerns over the new, super-information network.
MATRIX � Multistate Anti-Terrorism Information Exchange � is an intranet database regarded as the nation's largest cyber-compilation of personal records. It is touted as an efficient crime-fighting tool that allows agencies to access information with just a nimble fingertip.
Searchable databases allow law enforcement agents to probe for people using Social Security numbers, dates of birth, addresses, property records, motor vehicle information and credit history. The information is collected by states and forwarded to a database in Florida, where a private company, Seisint Inc., builds and manages the database.
The program essentially cross-references government records from both public and private databases, putting together a dossier on individuals for use by law enforcement.
Help Reason celebrate its next 40 years. Donate Now!
Try Reason's award-winning print edition today! Your first issue is FREE if you are not completely satisfied.
[inside joke for basketball fans]
I wonder if Officer Olden Polynice will be in charge of this.
[/inside joke for basketball fans]
Our state government can violate the 4th amendment rights of
law-abiding citizens, but it won't do anything about the organized
child molestation in polygamist communities in southern Utah?
MATRIX? For the Multistate Anti-Terrorism Information Exchange? Shouldn't it be "MATIE" -- like a pirate might say?
Our state government can violate the 4th amendment rights of
law-abiding citizens
Which 4th amendment rights were those, again?
The fourth amendment potentially applies to governmental attempts
to collect new information on you, since the act of collection is
potentially a "search".
But MATRIX combines publically available information with
information the government has already collected, into a single
easy-to-use database. This is not a "search", under the
Constitution, any more than it is a "search" when two police
compare the notes they took from witness interviews. Even if the
act of searching the database constituted a "search" under the
Constitution, the act of building the database would not.
Just because something is scary and potentially dangerous in
government hands doesn't mean it must somehow violate the
Constitution.
Whatever became of the State Municipal Offenders Database System (SMODS) anyway?
> MATRIX? For the Multistate Anti-Terrorism Information Exchange? Shouldn't it be "MATIE" -- like a pirate might say?
Site comments/questions:
Media Inquiries and Reprint Permissions:
(310) 367-6109
Editorial & Production Offices:
3415 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
Suite 400
Los Angeles, CA 90034
(310) 391-2245