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STAYING AHEAD OF 21ST CENTURY CRIME:
Director Mueller Welcomes Blue-Chip Science & Technology Advisors

11/03/03

Photograph of the Science and Technology BoardOn 10/31, Director Mueller convened the inaugural meeting of his Science & Technology Advisory Board. The idea for the panel grew out of a suggestion from Congressman Frank Wolf during a June 2002 House Appropriations Committee hearing on the Director’s efforts to reorganize the FBI. Following up on this suggestion, Congress authorized the Board in February.

What specifically will the Board do? It will provide the Director with independent, regular advice on how the FBI can more effectively exploit and apply science and technology to improve its operations. Board members will not be involved in specific procurement actions or contracts; rather, they will focus on identifying current
and emerging technologies that can maximize how the FBI conducts investigations, collects and disseminates intelligence, and collaborates with our law enforcement and intelligence partners. The Board will also advise the Director on how the FBI can strengthen its technical, scientific, and information technology workforces at a time when cases increasingly depend on such expertise.

Has it focused on a first project? Yes: Wireless technology that could allow employees to use PDAs, laptops, and similar devices to securely communicate the results of investigations and to send/receive Bureau email while still at crime scenes or outside the office.

How is the Board staffed? The Honorable Arthur Money, a former U.S. Assistant Secretary of Defense and Defense Department CIO, was chosen by the Director in late August to chair the panel. He brings many years of government and private-sector experience and expertise to the position. "It is my intention," he said, "to help Director Mueller achieve his goal of providing agents on the street, analysts, and all FBI employees with the best science, technology,
and tools available to get the job done."

Joining Mr. Money are seven board members who possess similar credentials in engineering, information technology, and science... or in the application of technology to law enforcement and national security areas: Mr. Floyd Clarke, senior corporate executive, and former FBI executive who served in every facet of Bureau operations throughout his career until his retirement as Acting Director of the FBI in 1993; Dr. Craig Fields, director of a number of corporations; international and Congressional consultant on technology issues; and former chair of the Defense Science Board; Dr. John Hamre, president of the Center for Strategic and International Studies, and former Deputy Secretary of Defense; Mr. Darwin John, former FBI CIO and senior corporate executive specializing in information and communications systems; Mr. James Kallstrom, senior corporate executive; advisor to New York Governor Pataki on Homeland Security;
and former FBI executive with a specialty in its engineering section, technical services, and special operations; Dr. Paul Kaminski, chairman and CEO of Technovation; a former undersecretary of Defense for Acquisition and Technology; and member of the National Academy of Engineering; and Dr. Joseph Markowitz, former director of the DCI's Community Open Source Program Office, serving as program manager and intelligence community principal for open source information.

How committed are these individuals to helping the FBI? All of them are serving without any pay! Sometimes, the best advice is free.

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