Freedom to Fascism

 
Jones Report
 

U.S., Canada to share forensics data

 

VIDEO: Rumsfeld Says Flight 93 Shot Down

OTHER NEWS
__________

Russo: Rockefeller fortold "event" eleven months before 9/11

...related video

Police take control of Mexican city

Poll: Majority Believes Gov't Doing Too Much

Swiss Re Insurance Defeats Silverstein Claim of WTC Double Incident

9/11 Only "Make Believe" Says Iranian Govt Official

Scientific Method vs. Political Method: The US Administration and 9/11

Minutemen 'expose' Bush's 'shadow government'

Guantanamo may be final home for many detainees

US Nat'l ID Cards by 2008

Corp Awarded Patent for Implantable RFID chips

School Safety Drill Upsets Some Parents

Global Warming Tax: Pay Up...Or the Planet Gets It

US to Conduct Gulf Naval Maneuvers Off Iran

Israel Preparing Broad Gaza Operation

Audit Finds Missing U.S. Weapons in Iraq

U.S. Military's October Death Toll at 100

Al Qaeda Plans for an October Surprise?

FBI Probing 'Nuclear Info Leak'

Airport Screeners Fail to See Most Test Bombs

Secret Cabinet Memo Admits Iraq is Fuelling UK Terror

Leak Defies Blair Terror Claim

Afghanistan War is 'Cuckoo,' Says Blair's Favourite General

Muse's Bellamy Discusses Uncle Killed by IRA

Operation Hollywood

Early Voting 'Glitches' in Florida

1 in 4 Using Absentee Ballot

Election Meltdown Brewing Everywhere...

Orange Co. Indicts 11 GOP Operatives for Voter Registration Fraud

GOP 'Party of Death', Too

Christians Dissatisfied with Public Education

Get TERRORSTORM on DVD now

9/11 and more at PrisonPlanet.tv

AP | November 17, 2006

ASHEVILLE, N.C. - U.S. and Canadian law enforcement officials agreed Thursday to begin sharing forensics data from crime scenes in both countries.

A memorandum of understanding signed by Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and Canadian Minister of Public Safety Stockwell Day marks the first in which the United States has agreed to immediate sharing of crime-scene information with a foreign government.

"And while terrorism is a primary concern for all of us, it is not our only job," Gonzales said. "Criminals are constantly searching for new ways to prey upon our communities. To stop them, we must maintain the same vigilance we show against terrorists."

Before Thursday's action, the two countries exchanged only a limited amount of ballistics information.

Under the agreement, each country will be able to view real-time forensics data, allowing bullets and firearms to be linked across crime scenes in both countries, said Michael Sullivan, acting director of the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

Canada has strict laws governing handgun sales, with the result that the majority of handguns used to commit crimes in Canada are purchased in the United States, Sullivan said.

The signing took place as part of the ninth annual United States-Canada Cross-Border Crime Forum, which is held at the historic Biltmore Estate in western North Carolina. The two-day meeting brought together hundreds of law-enforcement officers from the two countries.

Also present for the signing was U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, who praised the agreement as an opportunity to stop crime at the border and improve systems that attempt to keep potential terrorists from entering both countries.

Reader Comments

Get TERRORSTORM Before the History of Government-Sponsored Terrorism Catches Up With You.

CLICK ON THE BANNER TO BUY TERRORSTORM IN HARD COPY