Another Try at Centralized Border Patrolling Via Sharing Info
U.S. Customs and Border Protection opened a new Tucson-based
facility to help enhance information sharing across the nearly 60,000-person organization.
The new Intelligence and Operations Coordination Center will serve as the
“one-stop-shop” for operations coordination and information sharing across the
operational entities within the agency, including Field Operations, Border
Patrol and Air and Marine. A formal ribbon-cutting event with local officials
was held to officially open this first-of-its-kind facility.
“CBP has evolved as an agency created in the wake of 9/11.
The implementation of this coordination center enables CBP to transform into a
more intelligence-driven organization and ensures the continuity and
sustainability of national border security,” said CBP Acting Deputy
Commissioner David V. Aguilar. “This team, working with our state and local
partners, will play a vital role in protecting our country and our way of
life.”
One of Customs and Border Protection’s primary goals is to
become a more intelligence-driven organization and the IOCC will help provide
more real-time insight to local decision-makers and frontline officers and
agents. The IOCC establishes a centralized location for CBP field leadership to
plan and coordinate joint operations and share intelligence with CBP
operational components and law enforcement and intelligence partners.
The IOCC also has the capability to serve as a principal or
supplemental incident management center during natural disasters or other
critical incidents in support of our Federal, State, local, and tribal
partners.
Aguilar was joined by U.S. Attorney Dennis Burke, Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords, and Governor Jan Brewer.
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