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WORLD STORIES/UPDATE
Interpol says hundreds of thousands of stolen passport blanks aid terrorists

LYON, France (AP) - Stolen blank passports in the hundreds
of thousands, along with millions of other virgin documents, allow known
terrorists to breeze across borders, Interpol officials said. Ronald Noble,
Interpol's first American secretary general, told The Associated Press that
only 34 countries of 181 members have agreed to share their data. But,
together, they report 80,000 missing passports. "This is only what's on file,"
Noble said. "You can imagine the rest. If we don't have a global database with
everyone contributing, think of all the terrorists and criminals trading in
documents." By multiplying the 34 members' lists of stolen blank passports by
a factor of five, Noble said, the number reaches 400,000. Although he did not
single out countries, other Interpol officials said that the United States,
Britain and Germany were among Interpol members that did not share their
databases. All members are able to consult the list even if they do not
contribute information to it. Although many more passports are stolen from
travelers around the world, the blanks allow terrorists and criminals to
insert their own photographs, physical descriptions and names of choice.
Unless the numbers appear in a worldwide computerized database so that border
police can identify them, anyone can use a custom-made blank to move
undetected. When Italy recently decided to co-operate, authorities sent
Interpol the numbers of 200,000 missing travel documents. Within two days,
Noble said, police in other countries had made arrests. A senior Interpol
official said he expected Washington to soon begin supplying data to the list.
U.S. Justice Department spokesman Mark Corallo, reached by telephone, had no
immediate comment. Besides passports, stolen documents include other permits
and certificates that allow suspect travelers to obtain visas or establish
false identities. "These are all numbered documents so you don't have to worry
about false positives, translations or Arabic names that are so hard to
match," Noble said. "All anyone has to do is punch in a number." Even with
improved security methods, stolen documents are common across the world. Since
many countries still send passport blanks to small embassies and consulates in
distant capitals, thieves need only to break in and crack what are often
simple safes. In some cases, corrupt officials sell the documents in bulk. One
South American country that Noble would not name admitted to 50,000 missing
documents. Buyers are frequently criminal organizations that sell documents to
anyone willing to pay, or to terrorist groups that use them for their own
covert activities. "Criminals and terrorists know how law enforcement works,"
Noble said. "If they steal a credit card, they blow it out in two days and
then dump it before they are caught. It has a number." With travel documents,
he said, the practice was similar. Terrorists might risk quickly crossing a
border once or twice with a stolen valid passport. But they won't keep it
long. Noble, 47, has been secretary general since 2000. He is on the law
faculty of New York University and was chief law enforcement officer in the
Department of Treasury. According to international security specialists,
Washington's reluctance to supply data to Interpol reflects a broader problem
faced by the world's largest cross-border police organization. Interpol
officials who speak on the condition of anonymity often complain bitterly that
the United States, among others, accepts all information but refuses to share
crucial data in return. U.S. authorities acknowledge a general policy of
caution, saying that Interpol's worldwide membership leaves too many potential
security gaps. But, Noble argues, the picture has changed since the Sept. 11,
2001, attacks in America. "Law enforcement agencies are always going to keep
some things from everyone else," he said. "But the U.S. is sending many more
Red Notices (fugitive alerts), and they tell us much more than before." He
added, "If a country lets you know that a certain person is known and wanted,
how much more do they have to tell you?" At the same time, Noble admitted that
such databases as the stolen-passport list suffer when large countries do not
take part. In the end, he said, it is in everyone's interest. Some factors
will prevent complete co-operation, Interpol officials said. If a country
loses a large number of documents, authorities may be embarrassed to say so.
Or they may cover a theft. But world powers with access to wide-ranging
intelligence are better off sharing it, Noble argues. "The best security for
your own passports is to warn others when they disappear," he said. "UN and
world leaders should commit themselves to reporting passports as soon as
they're stolen." When chasing lawbreakers, Noble says, it does not matter
whether information comes from friends or foes, as long as it results in
capture. He laughs at the mention of a wanted poster near the computer centre.
Under the photo of a gaunt bearded man identified as Osama bin Laden, it
warns: subject might be violent and dangerous. Noble loves to point out that
the first international warning to capture bin Laden came not from a Western
power but rather from Libya, at the time a stalwart member of the axis of
evil. -Mort Rozenbloom