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Testimony:

Before the Committee on Government Reform, House of Representatives:

United States Government Accountability Office:

GAO:

For Release on Delivery Expected at 10:00 a.m. EDT:

Thursday, September 9, 2004:

Border Security:

Joint, Coordinated Actions by State and DHS Needed to Guide Biometric 
Visas and Related Programs:

Joint Statement of Jacquelyn L. Williams-Bridgers, Managing Director, 
International Affairs and Trade, and Randolph Hite, Director of 
Information Technology Architecture and Systems Issues:

GAO-04-1080T:

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-04-1080T, a testimony before the Committee on 
Government Reform, House of Representative

Why GAO Did This Study:

Since September 11, 2001, the U.S. government has made a concerted 
effort to strengthen border security by enhancing visa issuance 
policies and procedures, as well as expanding screening of the millions 
of foreign visitors who enter the United States annually. Consistent 
with the 9/11 Commission report that recommends a biometric entry-exit 
screening system for travelers, the Department of State’s biometric 
program complements the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) United 
States Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology (US-VISIT) 
program—a governmentwide program to better control and monitor the 
entry, visa status, and exit of visitors. 

GAO was asked to present the findings of its report on State’s 
Biometric Visa Program, as well as discuss other aspects of visa 
processing and border security that require coordinated, joint actions 
by State and DHS.

What GAO Found:

Our report issued today finds that State is implementing the Biometric 
Visa Program on schedule and will likely meet the October 26, 2004, 
deadline for issuing visas that include biometric indicators, as 
mandated by Congress. As of September 1, 2004, State had installed 
program hardware and software at 201 visa issuing posts overseas and 
plans to complete the installation at the remaining 6 posts by 
September 30. Technology installation has progressed smoothly, however 
State and DHS have not provided comprehensive guidance to consular 
posts on when and how information from the DHS Automated Biometric 
Identification System (IDENT) on visa applicants should be considered 
by adjudicating consular officers. In the absence of such guidance, we 
found that these officers are unclear on how best to use the biometric 
program and IDENT information.

Since September 11, State and DHS have made many improvements to visa 
issuance and border security policies. Nevertheless, in prior reports, 
we have found additional vulnerabilities that need to be addressed 
through joint, coordinated actions. For example, DHS has not adequately 
defined the operational context for US-VISIT, which affects the 
biometric program. In addition, we identified systemic weaknesses in 
information sharing between State and DHS in the visa revocation 
process. Moreover, we found related weaknesses in an interagency 
security check process aimed to prevent the illegal transfer of 
sensitive technologies. 

Example of Fingerprints and Photograph Capture: 

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

What GAO Recommends:

GAO has recommended that DHS and State develop and provide guidance to 
consular posts on how to use information from the biometric program to 
adjudicate visas. In other reports, GAO has made recommendations to 
DHS and State to improve US-VISIT, as well as several aspects of the 
nonimmigrant visa process. The agencies generally agreed and are taking 
actions to implement our recommendations.

[End of section]

Mr. Chairman and Members of the Committee:

We are pleased to be here to discuss our report[Footnote 1] being 
issued today on the Department of State's Biometric Visa Program, which 
requires that all persons applying for U.S. visas have certain 
biometrics[Footnote 2] (in this case, fingerprints) and digital 
photographs collected during the visa[Footnote 3] application process 
and cleared through the Department of Homeland Security's (DHS) 
Automated Biometric Identification System (IDENT) before receiving a 
visa. In addition, we will discuss several previous GAO reports that 
highlight the need for joint, coordinated efforts by State and DHS on 
programs to enhance border security and visa processes.

Since September 11, 2001, the U.S. government has made a concerted 
effort to strengthen border security by enhancing visa issuance 
policies and procedures, as well as improving the screening of the 
millions of foreign visitors who enter, stay in, and exit the United 
States annually. State's Biometric Visa Program complements the DHS-run 
United States Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology (US-
VISIT) program--a governmentwide program that collects, maintains, and 
shares information on foreign nationals to better control and monitor 
the entry, visa status, and exit of visitors. The Biometric Visa 
Program prescreens visa applicants at U.S. consulates overseas to 
ensure that they are qualified to obtain visas, while the US-VISIT 
program, among other things, verifies that the same person who applied 
for a visa is the one who is entering the United States using that 
visa.[Footnote 4] The biometric program is consistent with the July 
2004 9/11 Commission report,[Footnote 5] which recommends using 
biometric identifiers for border and transportation systems and a 
biometric entry-exit screening system for travelers.

Our statement today will focus on border security programs requiring 
joint, coordinated efforts by State and DHS. We will first discuss our 
observations of State's Biometric Visa Program. In addition, based on 
prior GAO reports, we will discuss some of our findings and our 
recommendations that called for coordinated efforts between DHS and 
State to improve other aspects the nonimmigrant visa process (NIV) and 
border security, including US-VISIT.

Summary:

We found that State is implementing the Biometric Visa Program on 
schedule and will likely meet the October 26, 2004, deadline for 
issuing visas with biometric identifiers, as mandated by 
Congress.[Footnote 6] As of September 1, 2004, State had installed 
program hardware and software at 201 of 207 overseas posts that issue 
visas, and State plans to complete the installation at the remaining 6 
posts by September 30. The biometric technology installation has 
progressed smoothly; however, DHS and State have not provided 
comprehensive guidance to consular posts on when and how information 
from IDENT on visa applicants should be considered by adjudicating 
consular officers.[Footnote 7] In the absence of such guidance, 
officers may be unclear on how best to use the biometric program and 
IDENT information. Therefore, in our report issued today, we have 
recommended that DHS and State develop and provide comprehensive 
guidance to consular posts on how information on visa applicants 
available through IDENT should be used to help adjudicate visas. DHS 
concurred with our report, and State acknowledged that there may be a 
lag in guidance.

State and DHS have made many improvements to border security and visa 
issuance policies since September 11, 2001. Nevertheless, in our 
reviews of various aspects of border security and visa issuance, we 
have found weaknesses that both agencies need to address through joint, 
coordinated actions. For example,

* DHS has deployed an initial US-VISIT operating capability for entry 
to 115 airports and 14 seaports. DHS plans to expand the initial 
operating capability to the 50 busiest land ports of entry by December 
2004, and to all remaining land ports of entry by December 2005. It has 
also deployed an exit capability, on a pilot basis, at two airports and 
one seaport.[Footnote 8] However, the program's operational context, or 
homeland security enterprise architecture,[Footnote 9] has not yet been 
adequately defined.[Footnote 10] DHS released an initial version of its 
enterprise architecture in September 2003; however, we found that this 
architecture was missing important content. This content is needed to 
help clarify and optimize the relationships between US-VISIT and other 
homeland security programs and operations, such as State's Biometric 
Visa Program.

* In 2003, we identified systemic weaknesses in the visa revocation 
process,[Footnote 11] many of which were the result of a failure of 
U.S. agencies to share and fully utilize information.[Footnote 12] We 
reported that information on individuals with visas revoked on 
terrorism grounds was not shared between State and appropriate 
immigration and law enforcement offices. We made several 
recommendations to State and DHS, which they agreed to implement. A 
follow-up review in summer 2004, showed that although State and DHS had 
made improvements in the revocation process, some weaknesses 
remained.[Footnote 13] For instance, in some cases State took a week or 
longer to notify DHS that individuals with revoked visas might have 
been in the country. As a result, we made additional recommendations to 
both agencies, which they agreed to implement.

* Timely information sharing among State, DHS, and other agencies also 
affects the time it takes to adjudicate a visa for a science student or 
scholar. In some cases, consular officers determine that some of these 
applicants must undergo a security check, known as Visas Mantis, to 
protect against sensitive technology transfers.[Footnote 14] In 
February 2004, we found that it was difficult to resolve some Visas 
Mantis cases expeditiously given the way in which information was 
disseminated among State, DHS, and other agencies. [Footnote 15] Again, 
we addressed recommendations to both State and DHS, and they are 
currently implementing them.

Overall, our work has demonstrated that joint, coordinated actions by 
State and DHS are critical for homeland and border security.

Background:

State's $162 million Biometric Visa Program is designed to work hand-
in-hand with the DHS multibillion-dollar US-VISIT program. Both 
programs aim to improve U.S. border security by verifying the identity 
of persons entering the United States. Both programs rely on the DHS 
Automated Biographic Identification System, known as IDENT, which is a 
repository of fingerprints and digital photographs of persons who 
either have applied for U.S. visas since the inception of the program 
in September 2003, have entered the United States at one of 115 air or 
14 sea ports of entry since January 2004, or are on a watch list--
whether for previous immigration violations or as part of the FBI's 
database of terrorists and individuals with felony convictions.
[Footnote 16]

Biometric Process at U.S. Consulates Overseas:

The process for determining who will be issued a visa consists of 
several steps. When a person applies for a visa at a U.S. consulate, a 
fingerprint scan is taken of his right and left index fingers. These 
prints are then transmitted from the overseas post through 
servers[Footnote 17] at State to DHS's IDENT system, which searches its 
records and sends a response back through State to the post.[Footnote 
18] A "hit" response--meaning that a match to someone previously 
entered in the system was found--prevents the post's computer system 
from printing a visa for the applicant until the information is 
reviewed and cleared by a consular officer. According to State data, 
the entire process generally takes about 30 minutes. If the computer 
cannot determine if two sets of prints match, IDENT refers the case to 
DHS fingerprint experts, who have up to 24 hours to return a response 
to State (see fig. 1).

Figure 1: Biometric Fingerprint Analysis Process:

[See PDF for image]

[End of figure]

United States Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology 
Program:

US-VISIT aims to enhance national security, facilitate legitimate trade 
and travel, contribute to the integrity of the U.S. immigration system, 
and adhere to U.S. privacy laws and policies by:

* collecting, maintaining, and sharing information on certain foreign 
nationals who enter and exit the United States;

* identifying foreign nationals who (1) have overstayed or violated the 
terms of their visit; (2) can receive, extend, or adjust their 
immigration status; or (3) should be apprehended or detained by law 
enforcement officials;

* detecting fraudulent travel documents, verifying traveler identity, 
and determining traveler admissibility through the use of biometrics; 
and:

* facilitating information sharing and coordination among appropriate 
agencies.

The process by which a foreign national is screened for entry is as 
follows: When a foreign national arrives at a port of entry to the 
United States, a DHS inspector scans the machine-readable travel 
documents. Existing records on the foreign national, including 
biographic lookout hits are returned. The computer presents available 
biographic information and a photograph and determines whether IDENT 
contains existing fingerprints for the foreign national. The inspector 
then scans the foreign national's fingerprints (left and right index 
fingers) and takes a photograph. This information is checked against 
stored fingerprints in IDENT. If no matching prints are in IDENT, the 
foreign national is enrolled in US-VISIT (i.e., biographic and 
biometric data are entered). If the foreign national's fingerprints are 
already in IDENT, the system performs a comparison of the fingerprint 
taken at the port of entry to the one on file to confirm that the 
person submitting the fingerprints is the person on file. If the system 
finds a mismatch of fingerprints or a watch list hit, the foreign 
national is held for further screening or processing.

Biometric Visa Implementation Nearing Completion, but Some Guidance 
Still Needed:

State's implementation of the technology aspects of the biometric visa 
program is currently on schedule to meet the October 26, 2004, 
deadline. According to State officials, a well-planned rollout of 
equipment and software and fewer technical problems than anticipated 
led to smooth implementation of the technological aspects of the 
program at the 201 posts that had the program operating as of September 
1, 2004. But amid the fast pace of rolling out the program to meet the 
deadline, DHS and State have not provided comprehensive guidance for 
consular posts on how the information about visa applicants made 
available through the Biometric Visa Program should best be used to 
help adjudicate visas. Indeed, we found several significant differences 
in the implementation of the biometric program during our visits to San 
Salvador, El Salvador, and Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. State 
acknowledged that posts may be implementing the program in various ways 
across the 207 consular posts that issue nonimmigrant visas.

State Expects to Meet Implementation Deadline:

According to State officials, the implementation process for the 
biometric program led to far fewer technical problems than expected. 
Early on, State had a few difficulties in transmitting data between the 
posts and DHS's IDENT, primarily related to server and firewall 
(computer security) issues. According to State, most issues were 
resolved within a few days. In fact, 201 nonimmigrant visa (NIV)-
issuing posts out of 207 had the software and hardware installed and 
were transmitting prints to IDENT for analysis as of September 1, 2004. 
State anticipates the completion of the installation by the October 
2004 deadline.

Fingerprinting Raising Issues in Visa Process:

According to State's data, from February to August 2004, the total 
biometric visa process averaged about 30 minutes for an applicant's 
prints to be sent from an overseas post to the State server, and on to 
DHS for IDENT analysis and then for the response to be returned through 
State's server to the posts. IDENT response time could affect visa 
issuance times because a visa cannot be issued until the post has 
received and reviewed the IDENT response. Our observations at posts in 
San Salvador and Santo Domingo demonstrated the importance of the 
length of time required to receive an IDENT response. We observed that 
most interviews average only a few minutes, but the IDENT response time 
currently is 30 minutes. Thus, if interviewing officers collect prints 
during the interview, the interview would be completed before the IDENT 
response would be available to consular officers. Since the visa cannot 
be issued until the IDENT information is considered by the consulate, 
potential delays in the IDENT response times could have a major effect 
on the visa issuance process and inconvenience visa applicants. State 
has encouraged consular officials to issue visas the day after 
interviews since part of the visa process now relies on another 
agency's system. This will require significant changes for posts such 
as Santo Domingo, which still issues same-day visas.

Guidance Lagging for Program Implementation:

State has focused on implementing the Biometric Visa Program by the 
mandated deadline; however, our report identifies certain lags in 
guidance on how the program should be implemented at consular posts. 
State and DHS have not yet provided to posts details of how all aspects 
of the program will be implemented, including who should scan 
fingerprints, where and who should review information about applicants 
returned from IDENT, and response times for the IDENT system. In 
addition, DHS and State have not provided comprehensive guidance for 
consular posts on how the information about visa applicants made 
available through the Biometric Visa Program should be used to help 
adjudicate visas.

We believe that it is important for State and DHS to articulate how the 
program could best be implemented, providing a roadmap for posts to 
develop implementation plans that incorporate the guidance. We 
recognize, however, that the workload, personnel and facility resources 
vary considerably from post to post. As a result, each post may not be 
able to easily implement the Biometric Visa Program according to a 
precise set of guidelines. However, posts could develop procedures to 
implement the guidance, identify resource and facility constraints, and 
implement mitigating actions to address their own unique circumstances. 
Therefore, we have recommended that DHS and State provide comprehensive 
guidance to consular posts on how information about visa applicants 
that is now available from IDENT should be used to help adjudicate 
visas. In responding to our recommendation, DHS generally concurred and 
State acknowledged that there may be a lag in guidance.

Program Implementation Varies at Consular Posts:

Our work at two posts shows that, because they lack specific guidance 
on the system's use, consular officers at these overseas posts are 
uncertain how they should implement the Biometric Visa Program and are 
currently using the returned IDENT responses in a variety of ways. For 
example, we found that, in cases in which the IDENT response 
information is available to the overseas post by the time of the visa 
applicant interview, some consular officers who conduct interviews 
review information before the interview, some review it during the 
interview, and some rely instead on a designated officer or the line 
chief to review the information after the interview is completed and 
before affected visas are printed.

We found several differences in the visa operations at two posts--San 
Salvador, El Salvador, and Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic--that 
handle a large volume of visa applications. For example,

* San Salvador, one of the first posts to begin implementing the 
program in September 2003, has a large new embassy complex that allowed 
the post great flexibility in implementing the collection of 
biometrics. Applicants are led through outdoor security screening 
before entering the interview waiting room. Once in the waiting room, 
they immediately proceed to a fingerprint scanning window where an 
American officer verifies their names and photographs and scans their 
fingerprints. By the time they arrive at their interview windows, 
usually the interviewing officer has received their IDENT responses. 
However, the post has designated one officer to review all of the IDENT 
responses, so some interviewing officers do not take the time to review 
IDENT information on those they interview even if the information is 
available at the time of the interview.

* Santo Domingo's consular section is hampered by significant facility 
constraints. The NIV applicant waiting area is very cramped and has 
been even more restricted over recent months due to construction 
efforts. Some of the NIV applicants are forced to share space in the 
immigrant visa waiting area. Santo Domingo has fewer interviewing 
windows than San Salvador and cannot easily spare one to designate for 
fulltime fingerprint scanning due to high interview volume. Some 
interviewing officers scan applicants' fingerprints at the time of the 
interview, so the interview ends before the IDENT response has been 
returned from DHS. One consular officer is designated to review the 
IDENT responses for all of the applicants, and interviewing officers 
may not see IDENT information on the applicants they interview. In some 
cases, the designated officer determines if the applicant should 
receive a visa, and in others he brings the IDENT information back to 
the original interviewing officer for the case for further review.

Joint, Coordinated Actions by State and DHS Required on Many Aspects of 
Visa Processing and Border Security:

Since September 11, 2001, we have issued reports recommending that 
State and DHS work together to improve several aspects of border 
security and the visa process, as described below. These reports show 
the importance of joint, coordinated actions by State and DHS to 
maximize program effectiveness.

US-VISIT Operating at Selected Points of Entry, but DHS Further 
Defining its Operational Context:

The US-VISIT program supports a multifaceted, critical mission: to help 
protect approximately 95,000 miles of shoreline and navigable waterways 
through inspections of foreign nationals at U.S. ports of entry. DHS 
has deployed an initial operating capability for entry to 115 airports 
and 14 seaports. It has also deployed an exit capability, as a pilot, 
at two airports and one seaport. Since becoming operational, DHS 
reports that more than eight million foreign nationals have been 
processed by US-VISIT at ports of entry, resulting in hundreds being 
denied entry. Its scope is large and complex, connecting 16 existing 
information technology systems in a governmentwide process involving 
multiple departments and agencies.[Footnote 19] In addition to these 
and other challenges, the program's operational context, or homeland 
security enterprise architecture, is not yet adequately defined.

DHS released an initial version of its enterprise architecture in 
September 2003; however, we found that this architecture was missing, 
either partially or completely, all the key elements expected in a 
well-defined architecture, such as descriptions of business processes, 
information flows among these processes, and security rules associated 
with these information flows.[Footnote 20] DHS could benefit from such 
key elements to help clarify and optimize the relationships between US-
VISIT and other homeland security programs operations, such as State's 
Biometric Visa Program, both in terms of processes and the underlying 
information technology infrastructure and applications. Although the 
biometrics program is administered by State, it falls under the overall 
visa policy area of the DHS Directorate of Border and Transportation 
Security, and is part of our national homeland security mission. State 
officials indicated that they are waiting for DHS to further define US-
VISIT, which would help guide State's actions on the Biometric Visa 
Program.

Aspects of NIV Process Require State and DHS Cooperation:

Since September 11, 2001, our work has demonstrated the need for State 
and DHS to work together to better address potential vulnerabilities in 
the visa process. In June 2003, we identified systemic weaknesses in 
the visa revocation process, many of which were the result of a failure 
to share and fully utilize information. We reported that the visa 
revocation process was not used aggressively to share information among 
agencies on individuals with visas revoked on terrorism 
grounds.[Footnote 21] It also broke down when these individuals had 
already entered the United States prior to revocation. Immigration 
officials and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) were not then 
routinely taking actions to investigate, locate, or resolve the cases 
of individuals who remained in the United States after their visas were 
revoked. Therefore, we recommended that DHS, in conjunction with the 
Departments of State and Justice, develop specific policies and 
procedures to ensure that appropriate agencies are notified of 
revocations based on terrorism grounds and take proper actions.

In July 2004, we followed up on our findings and recommendations 
regarding interagency coordination in the visa revocation process and 
found that State and DHS had taken some actions in the summer of 2003 
to address these weaknesses.[Footnote 22] However, our review showed 
that some weaknesses remained. For instance, in some cases State took a 
week or longer to notify DHS that individuals with revoked visas might 
be in the country. Without these notifications, DHS may not know to 
investigate those individuals. Given outstanding legal and policy 
issues regarding the removal of individuals based solely on their visa 
revocation, we recommended that the Secretaries of Homeland Security 
and State jointly (1) develop a written governmentwide policy that 
clearly defines roles and responsibilities and sets performance 
standards and (2) address outstanding legal and policy issues in this 
area or provide Congress with specific actions it could take to resolve 
them. State agreed to work together with DHS to address these 
recommendations.

In February 2004, we reported that the time it takes to adjudicate a 
visa for a science student or scholar depends largely on whether an 
applicant must undergo a security check known as Visas Mantis, which is 
designed to protect against sensitive technology transfers.[Footnote 
23] Based on a random sample of Visas Mantis cases for science students 
and scholars, we found it took an average of 67 days for the 
interagency security check to be processed and for State to notify the 
post. We also found that the way in which Visas Mantis information was 
disseminated at headquarters made it difficult to resolve some cases 
expeditiously. Finally, consular staff at posts we visited stated that 
they lacked clear guidance on the Visas Mantis program. While State and 
FBI officials acknowledged there had been lengthy waits, they reported 
having measures under way to improve the process and to identify and 
resolve outstanding Visas Mantis cases. We recommended that the 
Secretary of State, in coordination with the Director of the FBI and 
the Secretary of Homeland Security, develop and implement a plan to 
improve the Visas Mantis process. We are currently reviewing the 
measures these agencies have taken to improve the Visas Mantis program 
made since our February report and will report on our findings at the 
beginning of next year.

Overall, we have reported on a number of areas in which joint, 
coordinated actions by DHS and State are needed to improve border 
security and visa processing. In commenting in our report of State's 
biometric program, both DHS and State have pledged their commitment to 
continued cooperation and joint actions. Indeed, these agencies are 
currently working together as part of the US-VISIT program. For 
example, State participates in two DHS-led groups designed to oversee 
and manage the US-VISIT program. First, State participates on the US-
VISIT Federal Stakeholders Advisory Board, which provides guidance and 
direction to the US-VISIT program. State also participates as part of 
the US-VISIT Integrated Project Team, which meets weekly to discuss, 
among other things, operational issues concerning the deployment of US-
VISIT.

Conclusion:

Mr. Chairman, overall, our work has demonstrated that coordinated, 
joint actions by State and DHS are critical for homeland and border 
security. State and DHS have worked together to roll out the biometric 
technology to consular posts worldwide on schedule. Moreover, their 
cooperation on US-VISIT will be critical to ensure that information is 
available to consulates to adjudicate visa applications and prevent 
persons from unlawfully entering the United States. However, they have 
not yet provided comprehensive guidance to the posts on how the program 
and biometric information should be used to adjudicate visas. We 
recognize that it may not be feasible for each post to implement 
biometric visas in the same way, given the variances among posts in 
workload, security concerns with the applicant pool, facilities, and 
personnel. However, guidance to posts on how to best implement the 
program, including best practices, would enable posts to develop 
operating procedures, identify resource needs, and implement mitigating 
actions to address the unique circumstances at each post.

Therefore we have recommended that the Secretaries of Homeland Security 
and State develop and provide comprehensive guidance to consular posts 
on how best to implement the Biometric Visa Program. The guidance 
should address the planned uses for the information generated by the 
Biometric Visa Program at consular posts including directions to 
consular officers on when and how information from the IDENT database 
on visa applicants should be considered. Further, we have recommended 
that the Secretary of State direct consular posts to develop an 
implementation plan based on this guidance. DHS generally concurred 
with our recommendations, stating that GAO's identification of areas 
where improvements are needed in the Biometric Visa Program will 
contribute to ongoing efforts to strengthen the visa process. State 
acknowledged that there may be a lag in guidance. Regarding US-VISIT, 
we made an earlier recommendation that the Secretary for Homeland 
Security clarify the operational context in which US-VISIT is to 
operate. DHS agreed with our recommendation and plans to issue the next 
version of their enterprise architecture in September of 2004. This is 
an essential component in establishing biometric policy and creating 
consistency between the DHS-run US-VISIT program and State's Biometric 
Visa program.

Mr. Chairman, this concludes my prepared statement. I would be pleased 
to answer any questions you or other members of the committee may have.

Contacts and Acknowledgments:

For questions regarding this testimony, please call Jess Ford at (202) 
512-4128. Other key contributors to this statement include John 
Brummet, Sharron Candon, Deborah Davis, Kathryn Hartsburg, David 
Hinchman, and David Noone.

FOOTNOTES

[1] See GAO, BORDER SECURITY: State Department Rollout of Biometric 
Visas on Schedule, but Guidance Is Lagging, GAO-04-1001 (Washington, 
D.C.: Sept. 9, 2004).

[2] Biometrics is a wide range of technologies that can be used to, 
among other things, verify a person's identity by capturing and 
analyzing his or her physiological characteristics. In this case, and 
for the purposes of this report, "biometric identifiers" refers to 
fingerprints. See GAO, Technology Assessment: Using Biometrics for 
Border Security, GAO-03-174 (Washington, D.C.: Nov. 14, 2002). 

[3] In this report, we use the term "visa" to refer to nonimmigrant 
visas only. The United States also grants visas to people who intend to 
immigrate to the United States. A visa allows a foreign visitor to 
present himself at a port of entry for admission to the United States. 

[4] DHS currently does not have information on individuals apprehended 
at ports of entry when their prints and photographs did not match those 
captured at the consular posts for the visa they were using. On July 
19, 2004, DHS implemented a system to assist in identifying such cases 
and indicated that it will be able to develop better information in the 
future. 

[5] The National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United 
States, The 9/11 Commission Report (Washington, D.C.: July 22, 2004).

[6] Section 303 of the Enhanced Border Security and Visa Entry Reform 
Act of 2002 (Pub. L. No. 107-173) requires that no later than October 
26, 2004, the State Department issue visas that use biometric 
identifiers.

[7] The Homeland Security Act of 2002 establishes DHS's role in the 
visa process, and a subsequent September 2003 Memorandum of 
Understanding between the Secretaries of State and Homeland Security 
further outlines the visa issuance authorities. According to the 
memorandum, DHS is responsible for establishing visa policy, reviewing 
implementation of the policy, and providing additional direction, while 
State is responsible for managing the visa process, managing the 
consular corps and its functions, and carrying out U.S. foreign policy. 
DHS and State share responsibility for policy and implementation of the 
Biometric Visa Program.

[8] These are the Baltimore/Washington International Airport, Chicago 
O'Hare International Airport, and the Miami Royal Caribbean seaport.

[9] An enterprise architecture provides a clear and comprehensive 
picture of the structure of an entity, whether an organization or a 
functional or mission area, including depictions of the enterprise's 
current or "as-is" technical and operational environments, its target 
or "to-be" technical and operational environments, and a plan for 
transitioning to the target. A properly managed enterprise architecture 
can clarify and help optimize the interdependencies and relationships 
among business operations, as well as those between these operations 
and the underlying information technology infrastructure and 
applications.

[10] See GAO, Homeland Security: Efforts Are Underway to Develop 
Enterprise Architecture, But Much Work Remains, GAO-04-777 (Washington, 
D.C.: Aug. 6, 2004).

[11] The visa revocation process is a homeland security tool that can 
prevent potential terrorists from entering the United States and can 
help DHS officials identify and investigate potential terrorists that 
may have already entered the country.

[12] See GAO, BORDER SECURITY: New Policies and Procedures Are Needed 
to Fill Gaps in the Visa Revocation Process, GAO-03-798 (Washington, 
D.C.: June 18, 2003).

[13] See GAO, BORDER SECURITY: Additional Actions Needed to Eliminate 
Weaknesses in the Visa Revocation Process, GAO-04-795 (Washington, 
D.C.: July 13, 2004).

[14] The Visas Mantis process allows all participating agencies, 
including DHS, to provide information and raise any particular concerns 
that they may have regarding the applicant and/or the applicant's 
proposed activities in the United States. According to State, the key 
role of the Visas Mantis process is to protect U.S. national security, 
particularly in combating the proliferation of weapons of mass 
destruction, their delivery systems, and conventional weapons.

[15] See GAO, BORDER SECURITY: Improvements Needed to Reduce Time Taken 
to Adjudicate Visas for Science Students and Scholars, GAO-04-371 
(Washington, D.C.: Feb. 25, 2004).

[16] IDENT data includes FBI information on all known and suspected 
terrorists, selected wanted persons (foreign-born, unknown place of 
birth, previously arrested by DHS), and previous criminal histories for 
high risk countries; DHS Immigration and Customs Enforcement 
information on deported felons and sexual registrants; and DHS 
information on previous criminal histories. Information from the bureau 
includes fingerprints from the Integrated Automated Fingerprint 
Identification System.

[17] A server is a computer on a network that manages network 
resources, such as storing files, managing printers, managing network 
traffic, or processing database queries

[18] In a hit record, information is included on the person's previous 
entry in the system, either at a port of entry or U.S. consulate, or 
through the watch list.

[19] GAO has identified US-VISIT as a high-risk endeavor. See GAO, 
Homeland Security: Risks Facing Key Border and Transportation Security 
Program Need to Be Addressed, GAO-03-1083 (Washington, D.C; Sept. 19, 
2003).

[20] DHS plans to release an updated version of its enterprise 
architecture in September 2004.

[21] GAO-03-798.

[22] GAO-04-795.

[23] GAO-04-371.