Pending Public Safety Petitions Dismissed

May 4, 2017–The FCC’s Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau issued an order today dismissing 29 pending petitions and other requests. The bureau said in the order in PS docket 14-246 that the “petitions and other requests were … listed in the Attachment to the Dismissal Public Notice, released on December 5, 2014 [TR Daily, Dec. 5, 2014]. Dismissal of these petitions and other requests furthers the Commission’s organizational and administrative goals by increasing the efficiency of its decision-making, reducing backlog, and bringing administrative finality to filings that were abandoned, that are no longer of any apparent interest to the filers, or for which no further action is required or contemplated.”

Courtesy TRDaily

News Release: DHS Delivers Study on Government Mobile Device Security to Congress

Washington—The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has submitted a report to Congress that details current and emerging threats to the Federal government’s use of mobile devices and recommends security improvements within the mobile device ecosystem. The DHS Science and Technology Directorate (S&T) led the study in coordination with the National Institute of Standards and Technology and its National Cybersecurity Center of Excellence.

Mandated by the Cybersecurity Act of 2015, the “Study on Mobile Device Security” relied on significant input from mobile industry vendors, carriers, service providers and academic researchers.

“The Study on Mobile Device Security has found that threats to the mobile device ecosystem are growing, but also that the security of mobile computing is improving,” said Dr. Robert Griffin, Under Secretary (Acting) for Science and Technology. “It outlines several important recommendations to strengthen security that will help the Federal government keep pace with current and emerging threats.”         Continue reading

PSCR Announces Public Safety Enhanced User Interface Roadmap R&D Summit July 18-19

PSCR is pleased to announce the Public Safety Enhanced User Interface Roadmap R&D Summit will take place July 18-19, 2017 at the Department of Commerce Boulder Labs. The Summit enables stakeholders to provide input on the recently published Public Safety User Interface R&D RoadmapPSCR wants to review the roadmap report outcomes with a wide audience in order to gain a sufficiently broad baseline of information from which to develop initial User Interface-related project plans. The Summit will be a working meeting consisting of multiple breakouts designed to gather input from attendees to inform PSCR’s R&D program. This event is open to the public but space will be limited.

PSCR has reserved approximately 30 invitational travel spots for the User Interface Summit that are available on a first come, first serve basis. Given that sponsored travel for this event is limited, we encourage you to identify who from your organization would like to attend as soon as possible. If you anticipate that more than 8 people from your organization are interested in attending, please coordinate with me directly before prospective attendees register given that invitational travel is limited to 30 participants. Continue reading

Wisconsin To Issue Alternative FirstNet RFP

May 3, 2017–Wisconsin is the latest state that plans to issue a request for proposals (RFP) for an alternative plan to having AT&T, Inc., the First Responder Network Authority’s (FirstNet) network partner, build a radio access network (RAN) in its state. The state is seeking input by May 11 on the draft of its RFP. It plans to issue the final RFP on May 19 and wants responses by July 6.

“The intent of this Request for Proposal (RFP) is to identify the best path forward to a public safety wireless broadband network using the results of this RFP as a means of evaluating options between the FirstNet state plan for Wisconsin and the proposed solutions in response to this RFP,” according to the draft document. “The State anticipates that proposed solutions will at minimum meet FirstNet offerings and exceed them where possible and be provided at no cost to the State.”

Courtesy TRDaily

House Passes FY 2017 Appropriations Bill

The House today passed on a 240-186 vote a bipartisan omnibus appropriations bill (HR 244) that would fund federal government operations through the end of fiscal year 2017, which ends on Sept. 30. Last week, Congress passed and President Trump signed a short-term continuing appropriations resolution that expires on May 5 (TR Daily, April 28).

Courtesy TRDaily

 

Andy Seybold’s Public Safety Advocate, May 4, 2017

The Politics of Opting In (or Out) As my readers know by now, I am pro-opt-in for the FirstNet/AT&T network. I believe it makes the most sense and if the opt-in decision is augmented by other means of enhancing the network within a state then it is truly a win for Public Safety and the state.

The timing for the opt-in decision is not ideal. AT&T says it will deliver draft state plans in June with final plans being delivered in October. When the finals are delivered, the 90-day opt-in or opt-out clock starts to run. In essence, the governor of each state and territory has three options, not two. The first is to opt in by saying the state is opting in. The next of course is the governor saying the state will opt out. The third is for the governor to not say anything for 90 days, in which case a default decision will be made by law to automatically opt in. A governor may base the state’s opt-in, opt-out decision on potential political implications for him or her and make the most convenient decision.

Because of the court case and the delay it caused, the delivery of the state plans is in October, which is not an ideal time for a number of reasons political and otherwise. If the plans are delivered in early October and the state folks who have been working with AT&T and FirstNet since the draft plan was presented in June can make a quick decision and inform the governor of what they believe is the right choice, then the opt-in could happen quickly. As a result, the AT&T broadband network in that state would become available to all first responders in that state almost immediately. However, if the governor is not clear about his or her choice and waits for almost the entire 90 days to pass, that could also have implications in a few of the states and territories.

During this timeframe both New Jersey and Virginia will be in the process of electing a new governor since in both states the governor is facing term limits at the end of the year. So the election in these states will be held on November 7, 2017. That brings up the issue of politics. Will the FirstNet opt-in or opt-out decision become an issue in the election? Will existing governors opt in or opt out before their terms expires perhaps to help their legacy? Will nothing happen during this time so the 90-day opt-in, opt-out window will expire and the opt-in decision will become the state’s default choice? Continue reading

SAFECOM Nationwide Survey (SNS): A Nationwide Data Collection of Emergency Communication Policies, Programs, and Funding

The SAFECOM Nationwide Survey (SNS) is a nationwide data collection effort to obtain actionable and critical data that drives our nation’s emergency communication policies, programs, and funding. SAFECOM will leverage the collected data to identify gaps and inform development of the program’s strategic priorities; and will assist the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Office of Emergency Communications (OEC) to execute the Nationwide Communication Baseline Assessment (NCBA). The materials below provides information about the SNS.

2017 SAFECOM Nationwide Survey Fact Sheet The fact sheet provides information about the SAFECOM Nationwide Survey’s overview, target population, development, public safety partners benefits, and release.

2017 SAFECOM Nationwide Survey Frequently Asked Questions The document provides a collection of answers to frequently asked questions about the 2017 SAFECOM Nationwide Survey.

The anticipated release of the SAFECOM Nationwide Survey is Summer 2017. Please continue to visit the SNS webpage for the most up to date information. Questions about the SNS can be directed to SAFECOM by e-mailing SNS@hq.dhs.gov

 

S&T Snapshot: Eye Tracking Technology Enhances Imposter Detection Training

Customs and Border Protection (CBP) screens nearly one million people every day and secures and manages 328 ports of entry all over the country, including in remote areas. Verifying the identity of every single person entering the United States is a vital step in halting human trafficking, drug trafficking, and other smuggling attempts at the border. In addition, security screening prevents criminals and terrorists from entering the country. Imposter detection crosscuts the entire Homeland Security Enterprise, as well as state, local, and tribal law enforcement and even front line soldiers in our military. All of these frontline operators execute this task as part of their respective missions and they must be able to accurately and efficiently verify identification of individuals to thwart imposters.

The Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) Science and Technology Directorate (S&T) collaborated with CBP and the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center (FLETC) to develop tools that can help optimize imposter detection training. The most recent capability to transition is called Eye-dentify, which is an imposter detection training technology. Continue reading

S&T News Release: Cybersecurity Expert to Keynote 2017 DHS Cyber Security R&D Showcase

WASHINGTON —Eminent cybersecurity expert Dr. Edward Amoroso will be a keynote speaker for the 2017 Cyber Security R&D Showcase and Technical Workshop on July 11-13, 2017 at the Mayflower Hotel in Washington, D.C.

The R&D Showcase and Technical Workshop—sponsored by the Department of Homeland Security’s Science and Technology Directorate (S&T)—is the federal government’s largest cybersecurity research and development conference.

During his July 13 presentations titled “A Random Walk through Cyber Security,” Dr. Amoroso will present a fun and fast-moving talk that will touch on a range of relevant government and industry topics. Continue reading

New York Times Reports: In Connecticut Murder Case, a Fitbit Is a Silent Witness

By CHRISTINE HAUSER APRIL 27, 2017 The woman shot dead in the basement of her suburban Connecticut home had struggled with an intruder, her husband told the police just before Christmas in 2015. But over time, the story fell apart as investigators began to rely on a silent witness — a Fitbit exercise tracker that recorded the woman’s last movements and may be the key to solving her murder. The case that began at the house of Richard and Connie Dabate in Ellington, a town of about 15,000 people north of Hartford, and unfolded over the last year highlights the latest example of how exercise devices have become increasingly part of investigators’ tool kits. Fastened to the body, the exercise devices have a unique proximity as witnesses. They transmit heartbeats, sleep schedules, locations and distances, documenting their host’s life events, from innocent mishaps to criminal encounters. A Fitbit factored into a Pennsylvania sexual assault case in 2015 and a personal injury case in Canada in 2014. A Garmin Vivosmart GPS recorded a young woman’s struggle with an attacker in a Seattle park in March.

The devices are incorporated alongside the more conventional use of searches of sniffer dogs and gunshot residue tests, both of which came up inconclusive in the Debate case. When Connecticut police arrived at the home on the morning of Dec. 23, 2015, Mr. Dabate spoke of a violent struggle with a masked intruder who zip­tied him to a chair, demanded his wallet and credit cards, cut him with a knife and then fatally shot his wife in the basement, according to an arrest warrant. But over time, the narrative that Mr. Dabate told investigators started to unravel when compared with a timeline pieced together using digital data from the family home, the warrant said.

Most importantly, a Fitbit on Ms. Dabate’s waistband recorded that she had walked 1,217 feet around the house during the time her husband said they were being attacked. The Fitbit showed her last living movement was at 10:05 a.m. Mr. Dabate, 40, was charged in Superior Court in Rockville on April 14 with murder, tampering with evidence and providing false statements, court documents showed, partly based on information from the Fitbit device. He was released on $1 million bond and was expected to return to court this week. His lawyer, Hubert Santos, could not be reached on Thursday. But The Hartford Courant quoted him as saying that Mr. Dabate was “innocent of these charges, and he looks forward to being vindicated after a trial.” As with computers and smartphones before them, the growing popularity of personal exercise trackers has presented lawyers and prosecutors with both privacy challenges and investigative advantages.

In 2014, a Calgary, Alberta, law firm used a Fitbit device as part of a personal injury case to show that their client was less active than she was before a car accident, according to Canadian Lawyer magazine. “It is definitely something we are going to see more of in the future,” said Detective Christopher Jones of the East Lampeter Township Police Department in Pennsylvania in a telephone interview on Thursday. “As people continue to provide more and more personal information through technology, they have to understand we are obligated to find the best evidence, and this technology has become a part of that.”

Read more here: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/04/27/nyregion/in-connecticut-murder-case-a-fitbit-is-a-silent-witness.html?_r=1