Pubdate: Fri, 31 May 2002 Source: Gaston Gazette, The (NC) Copyright: 2002 The Gaston Gazette Contact: http://www.gast-gazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1702 NOT EXACTLY A REVOLUTION The reorganization of the Federal Bureau of Investigation announced this week by FBI Director Robert Mueller hardly lives up to the promise "to fundamentally change the way we do business." Other than shifting 400 agents from drug law enforcement to anti-terrorism units, the reorganization plans amount to superficial patchwork - and just might make the problems posed by the uncontrolled recent growth of dozens of federal law enforcement agencies worse. Consider the implications of the recent flap over memos and requests from FBI field offices in Phoenix and Minneapolis. The Phoenix memo got lost in the bureaucratic paperwork shuffle; hundreds of similar memos hit headquarters every day. The Minneapolis request to issue a warrant to search Zacarias Moussaoui's computer fell victim to bureaucratic timidity and PC fears of being accused of "ethnic profiling." Creating a more centralized anti-terrorist operation and hiring more FBI agents is not likely to solve such problems. It is more likely to add to paperwork glut and impair communications. The Bush administration has missed a golden opportunity to effect genuinely fundamental reform of the federal law enforcement octopus. At least 40 federal agencies have some responsibility for gathering intelligence with some relationship to terrorism. Even if they all had the latest and most sophisticated computer database and networking systems - and it is notorious that they are all in the Model-T era computer-wise - it would be difficult for them to share information effectively. Furthermore, each agency has more powerful incentives to protect its own turf than to work well with others. Many of the reforms announced by Mr. Mueller require congressional approval. Several congressional committees have also announced probes into the pre-9/11 lapses. They should broaden their scope to consider more fundamental reform. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom