{"id":104540,"date":"2021-04-02T14:00:22","date_gmt":"2021-04-02T14:00:22","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/theintercept.com\/?p=350456"},"modified":"2021-04-02T14:00:22","modified_gmt":"2021-04-02T14:00:22","slug":"lexisnexis-to-provide-giant-database-of-personal-information-to-ice","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/2021\/04\/02\/lexisnexis-to-provide-giant-database-of-personal-information-to-ice\/","title":{"rendered":"LexisNexis to Provide Giant Database of Personal Information to ICE"},"content":{"rendered":"
The popular legal research<\/u> and data brokerage firm LexisNexis signed a $16.8 million contract to sell information to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, according to documents shared with The Intercept. The deal is already drawing fire from critics and comes less than two years after the company downplayed its ties to ICE, claiming it was \u201cnot working with them to build data infrastructure to assist their efforts.\u201d<\/p>\n
Though LexisNexis is perhaps best known for its role as a powerful scholarly and legal research tool, the company also caters to the immensely lucrative \u201crisk\u201d industry, providing, it says, 10,000 different data points on hundreds of millions of people to companies like financial institutions and insurance companies who want to, say, flag individuals with a history of fraud. LexisNexis Risk Solutions is also marketed to law enforcement agencies<\/a>, offering \u201cadvanced analytics to generate quality investigative leads, produce actionable intelligence and drive informed decisions\u201d \u2014 in other words, to find and arrest people.<\/p>\n The LexisNexis ICE deal appears to be providing a replacement for CLEAR, a risk industry service operated by Thomson Reuters that has been crucial<\/a> to ICE\u2019s deportation efforts. In February, the Washington Post noted<\/a> that the CLEAR contract was expiring and that it was \u201cunclear whether the Biden administration will renew the deal or award a new contract.\u201d<\/p>\n LexisNexis\u2019s February 25 ICE contract was shared with The Intercept by Mijente, a Latinx advocacy organization that has criticized links between ICE and tech companies<\/a> it says are profiting from human rights abuses, including LexisNexis and Thomson Reuters. The contract shows LexisNexis will provide Homeland Security investigators access to billions of different records containing personal data aggregated from a wide array of public and private sources, including credit history, bankruptcy records, license plate images, and cellular subscriber information. The company will also provide analytical tools that can help police connect these vast stores of data to the right person.<\/p>\n Though the contract is light on details, other ICE documents suggest how the LexisNexis database will be put to use. A notice<\/a> posted before the contract was awarded asked for a database that could \u201cassist the ICE mission of conducting criminal investigations\u201d and come with \u201ca robust analytical research tool for \u2026 in-depth exploration of persons of interest and vehicles,\u201d including what it called a \u201cLicense Plate Reader Subscription.\u201d<\/p>\n LexisNexis Risk Solutions spokesperson Jennifer Richman declined to say exactly what categories of data the company would provide ICE under the new contract, or what policies, if any, will govern how agency agency uses it, but said, “Our tool contains data primarily from public government records. The principal non-public data is authorized by Congress for such uses in the Drivers Privacy Protection Act and Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act statutes.”<\/p>\n ICE did not return a request for comment.<\/p>\n