Obama
executive order expands Homeland Security reach into local law
enforcement
President
Barack Obama signed an executive order Friday that expanded the
Department of Homeland Security’s ties to local law enforcement.
26
April, 2012
The
executive
order creates a White House Homeland Security Partnership Council
and Steering Committee, aimed at fostering local partnerships between
federal and private institutions “to address homeland security
challenges.”
The
council will be chaired by “the Assistant to the President for
Homeland Security and Counterterrorism (Chair), or a designee from
the National Security Staff.” The Council chair will also chair the
Steering Committee.
The
executive order comes weeks after a damning Senate report on Homeland
Security’s 77 fusion centers, which the Washington
Post called “pools of ineptitude, waste and civil liberties
intrusions.”
The
fusion centers were created between 2003 and 2007 as part of a joint
effort between DHS and the Justice Department to ease information
sharing among federal intelligence agencies, military services, and
state and local law enforcement.
Those
centers collected intelligence that the Senate report said was often
“irrelevant, useless or inappropriate intelligence reporting to
DHS, and many produced no intelligence reporting whatsoever.”
To
date, Obama has signed 141 executive orders, which is a smaller
number than either President George W. Bush or President Bill Clinton
signed during their first terms.
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