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Investigative reporting from NBC News, with your story ideas and documents. Share your ideas. Read about this blog. Follow us on Facebook and Twitter.

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  • 25
    Apr
    2013
    4:20pm, EDT

    NYC has 'smart' camera network to thwart terror attacks

    In a press conference regarding the news that the Boston Marathon bombers were intending on striking New York's Times Square, Mayor Michael Bloomberg touts camera technology and vows to continue to keep people safe.

    By Jeff Rossen and Tracy Connor, NBC News

    New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Thursday that if the Boston bomb suspects had made it to Times Square, they would have come face-to-lens with the city's "extensive network of cameras" -- part of an interactive nerve center that lets police do everything from read license plates to identify suspicious packages.

    The Domain Awareness System, nicknamed "the dashboard," was developed by Microsoft for the NYPD -- a three-year project that cost up to $40 million.

    It centralizes and synthesizes mountains of data and footage: street maps, feeds from more than 4,000 existing security cameras, 911 alerts,  arrest records, parking tickets and even radiation detectors.

    The result is a one-stop shop at NYPD headquarters in lower Manhattan for authorities responding to -- and trying to prevent -- major crimes and terrorist attacks.

    After the Boston Marathon bombing, the NYPD gave TODAY a behind-the-scenes look at the sophisticated system, which Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said is doing its job.


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    "We've had 16 plots against the city since Sept. 11, and none have succeeded," he said.

    Officials showed how hundreds of scanners that read license plates can spot a vehicle that's just been put on a watch list and how smart cameras fueled by artificial intelligence can flag a bag that's been left unattended too long.

    Cops are looking for a suspect in a red shirt? No problem -- the cameras can highlight anyone in that color in a crowd.

    The system was the product of a collaboration between Microsoft and the NYPD.

    "It was created by cops for cops," Jessica Tisch, director of planning and policy for the counterterrorism unit, told the Associated Press earlier this year.

    "We thought a lot about what information we want up close and personal and what needs to be a click away. It's all baked in there."

    As a result of the partnership, the NYPD will get a 30 percent cut as Microsoft sells the system to other police departments around the country and the world.

    Boston doesn't have a system like this -- yet -- though the FBI did identify the marathon bombing suspects through surveillance and spectator cameras.

    The release of their pictures is what sparked their desperate, bloody attempt to flee Boston in the hopes of heading, officials revealed Thursday, to Times Square to blow up the rest of their bombs.

    "We’ve made major investments in camera technology – notwithstanding the objections of some special interests," Bloomberg said Thursday, referring to invasion of privacy concerns that civil libertarians have raised about heightened surveillance.

    "The attacks in Boston, I think, demonstrate just how valuable those cameras can be."

    The Associated Press contributed to this report

    Police are beginning to make use of cutting-edge technology that could help officers spot a bomb before it goes off. NBC's Jeff Rossen reports.

    Related:

    Boston suspects intended 2nd attack in Times Square, officials say

    Sources: US databases on slain suspects didn't match

    162 comments

    The government has a secret system that spies on you 24 hours a day 365 days a year. It detects acts of terror.... Well, almost. .

    Show more
    Explore related topics: technology, times-square, surveillance, nypd, mayor-bloomberg, boston-marathon-bombing
  • 1
    Mar
    2013
    12:00pm, EST

    Chinese trader indicted in US accused of busting Iran missile embargo

    Reuters file

    An Iranian long-range shore-to-sea Qader (Capable) missile is launched during Velayat-90 war game on the Sea of Oman near the Strait of Hormuz in southern Iran on Jan. 2, 2012.

    By William Maclean and Ben Blanchard
    Reuters

    A Chinese businessman indicted in the United States over sales of missile parts to Iran is still making millions of dollars from the trade, say security officials who monitor compliance with Western and U.N. sanctions.

    These officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the businessman, Li Fangwei, has earned at least $10 million from illegal sales to Iran since his indictment by the New York County District Attorney in 2009.


    Follow @openchannelblog

    Trade sanctions are at the heart of international efforts to curb Iran's nuclear program for fear it is for military ends -- a suspicion Iran rejects. Li's alleged activities may point to Iran's resourcefulness in circumventing those sanctions and turn a spotlight on China's ability to police its own export restrictions.

    It is hard to quantify the contribution of foreign firms and individuals to Iran's nuclear and missile programs, but analysts believe some vital components are all but impossible for Tehran to produce at home.


    Contacted by Reuters on Feb 4, Li said he continued to get commercial inquiries from Iran but only for legitimate merchandise, such as steel products. Li said his company, LIMMT, had stopped selling to Iran once the United States began sanctioning it several years ago.

    He dismissed allegations by the security officials that he had used deception, including changes of company names, to supply Iran with Chinese and foreign-made parts such as high-grade alloys that can be used to enrich uranium and guidance devices suitable for missiles.

    "Sure, we did business with Iran, but we did not export the goods they said we did, missiles or whatever," Li said. "We still get inquiries from Iranian clients, but we don't respond to them."

    A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman said Beijing was adhering to trade restrictions, including a U.N. ban on helping Iran build missiles that can deliver nuclear warheads.

    Officials from Iran, including at firms the security officials said were clients of Li and at the embassy in Beijing, did not respond to requests for comment. A Chinese bank that the security officials said Li used for Iranian business denied it had breached U.N. sanctions.

    Targeted by feds, local prosecutor
    In 2006, the U.S. Treasury barred Li from the U.S. financial system for allegedly selling goods with potential military uses to Iran.

    Three years later, the New York County District Attorney unsealed a fraud indictment against Li and his metals company LIMMT on suspicion they had used false names to process further payments for sales to Iran through several U.S. banks.

    The U.S. banks employed by Li were innocent of any wrongdoing because Li and other suspects had concealed their identities, then-District Attorney Robert Morgenthau said.

    On Feb 4, Li said that at the time of the indictment he had felt there was no point in saying anything because U.S. courts and prosecutors "don't listen to reason. It's useless."

    Three weeks ago, on Feb. 11, the U.S. State Department issued fresh sanctions against Li, saying he had "engaged in missile technology proliferation activities that require the imposition of missile sanctions", and placing additional restrictions on any missile technology trade involving him.

    A State Department official said Li had been sanctioned because of his "proliferation to Iran" since his 2009 indictment. Li did not respond to calls seeking comment on the Feb 11 action.

    China reacted with irritation to the Feb. 11 measures. Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said the U.S. step "seriously violates the norms of international relations and harms China's interests" and urged the United States to immediately revoke "these irrational sanctions."

    China has no extradition treaty with Washington.

    Alloys, gyroscopes
    The security officials allege that since the 2009 indictment Li, working in concert with the Iranian Embassy in Beijing, had supplied parts to firms that make Iranian missiles, in particular the U.N.-blacklisted Shahid Bakeri Industrial Group (SBIG). SBIG did not reply to faxes and emails sent by Reuters for comment.

    The goods allegedly supplied included 15 metric  tons of high-grade aluminum alloy, more than 20 metric  tons of ultra-high strength steel and 1,700 kg of graphite cylinders.

    Li agreed in 2011 to supply 1,500 gyroscopes and accelerometers to SBIG, the security officials alleged, referring to devices that can be used in missile guidance and control systems -- a quantity sufficient for about 500 missiles.

    Gyroscopes are "controlled items" under the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR), an informal and voluntary partnership between 34 mainly Western countries. China is not a party to the MTCR but has similar export controls of its own.

    Li also supplied more specialized devices known as fiber-optic gyroscopes, the officials allege; their main uses are in missiles, robots or remotely operated land or sea vehicles.

    The officials accuse Li of advising SBIG and other Iranian clients to change details of shipments, including the falsification of the end-user and supplier details in contracts.

    Li denies all the allegations.

    Between 2010 and 2012, Li took over $10 million in payments from SBIG alone and travelled often to Iran, the officials allege. He used deception within China to hide his activities, not only from the authorities but from Chinese companies as well, the officials added.

    In 2012, they said, Li listed a Chinese company as a false end user to obtain repair equipment he intended to send to SBIG in Iran.

    A diplomat in Iran's Beijing Embassy helped Li, who is about 40, arrange meetings with defense officials when he visited Tehran, the security officials allege. In the Iranian capital, the officials said, some contacts knew him only as "The Tailor" to conceal his identity.

    Critical components
    The officials alleged that some of his clients were not always satisfied with the quality of his goods but kept on using him, perhaps for lack of choice.

    Asked in Beijing whether China knew of Li's purported activities, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua said China's position was "clear and steadfast" on non-proliferation: China had always upheld U.N. Security Council resolutions on non-proliferation. If a Chinese individual or company was doing anything illegal, it would be dealt with.

    An internal report for the U.S. Congress in December concluded that sanctions, respected by China, were making it increasingly tough for Tehran to obtain certain critical components and materials for its missiles.

    From 2004 to 2007, Chinese arms transfer agreements with Iran totaled about $300 million at today's prices; between 2008 and 2011 total arms transfer agreements dropped to less than $50 million, according to the report by the non-partisan Congressional Research Service (CRS) on Iranian missiles.

    Li said his company, LIMMT, had stopped selling to Iran once the United States began sanctioning it several years ago. He did not indicate a date, but the U.S. Treasury first sanctioned LIMMT in June 2006, citing its alleged support of and role in the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction to Iran.

    "We used to export steel, things like that. Nothing to do with missiles," he said.

    At two buildings in the northeastern city of Dalian which the security officials said had been used by Li, people either had never heard of him or said he had left some years ago.

    Additional reporting by William Maclean, Ben Blanchard and Michael Martina in Beijing and Dalian, Marcus George in Dubai, Dan Williams in Jerusalem, and Mark Hosenball, David Ingram and Anna Yukhananova in Washington.

    More from Open Channel:

    • Environmental group: Chemicals used in drinking water may be harming you
    • Iran widens use of scrapyard tanker fleet to evade oil sanctions, officials say
    • Horse meat in the US? Unlikely, but tests are rare

    Follow Open Channel from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook 


    29 comments

    These things are going to happen. We do it and they do it. We lie it and they lie it. We are noy going to run their foreign policy and interest and they are not going to tell us whom to sell what and what not. I think whole Iran thing is mishandled and people characterised by us due to Israel. We c …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: technology, china, iran, missile, embargo, sanctions, featured
  • 11
    Jun
    2012
    1:28pm, EDT

    FEC makes it easier to follow the campaign money

    By M. Alex Johnson, msnbc.com

    The Federal Election Commission has begun making campaign finance reports more readily available, immediately making the lives of political reporters and data junkies a thousand times easier.

    M. Alex Johnson M. Alex Johnson is a reporter for msnbc.com. Follow him on Twitter and Facebook.

    With little fanfare, the FEC has started making individual filings publicly available as a Real Simple Syndication feed, instantaneously available in any RSS system, such as Google Reader. The Sunlight Foundation, a Washington nonprofit that advocates for open government, reported the development last week.

    Technically speaking, FEC databases have long been public, but getting them has been a mind-numbing process. On the 20th of each month, the commission posts a large text file — sometimes approaching half a gigabyte — for every campaign finance filing over the previous month. Organizations that wanted to manipulate the data had to use special database tools to extract it, and it then had to be read by a real person for sorting into appropriate reporting categories.



    Follow Open Channel on Twitter and Facebook.


    Some of those hurdles remain — the reports are still in the .FEC file format and are still most easily accessed using the commission's downloadable command-line tool. But at least they now come to you directly and are easily browsable.

    Super PACS: Follow the money — if you can

    The Sunlight Foundation — which pushed for an RSS feed at an FEC meeting this year — called the development "a modest step" but one that was important "because it acknowledges that time-sensitive data needs to be presented in a convenient machine readable format."

    If you want to try it for yourself, you can access the new RSS here.

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    2 comments

    This should make it easier to see which special interests are putting money into both parties. I just hope this makes people stop and think before blindly voting along party lines. All people have to do is just research before they vote for a canidate, but some dont want to and just want to sling ba …

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    Explore related topics: rss, technology, campaign-finance, federal-election-commission, fec, featured
  • 5
    Jan
    2011
    1:58pm, EST

    Russian Facebook investors have sparked U.S. concerns

    By Robert Windrem, NBC News

    The Russian Internet company that this week purchased a stake in Facebook was prominently mentioned last February in a U.S. intelligence report questioning whether Russian oligarchs, operating on behalf of the Kremlin, were gaining too much control of the Internet in the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe.

    Digital Sky Technologies, working with Goldman Sachs, has agreed to invest $50 million in Facebook. The investment gives the Moscow-based company a 2.38 percent stake in Facebook. DST Global, a related investment vehicle, also has an undisclosed stake of its own in Facebook. Unconfirmed reports quoted by Agence France Press put that added stake at 10 percent.

    The little noticed intelligence report last year by the Director of National Intelligence noted that DST, the most powerful Internet company in Russia, is the most prominent example of how Russian oligarchs close to the Kremlin have gained increasing control of the Russian Internet, particularly its social networking sites. Although the company is still owned by its founders, one of its largest shareholders is an oligarch that the DNI report said is close to Russian government officials.

    The report, entitled, "Kremlin Allies' Expanding Control of Runet (the Russian Internet) Provokes Only Limited Opposition" noted:

    "Over the last several years, pro-government oligarchs have accumulated significant stakes in the leading portals of the Russian Internet. Between them, they own the majority of the most popular Russian social networking sites and the majority of the most popular Russian Websites. While media outlets owned by government companies or allies have not yet shown signs of censorship, the leadership and owners of these Russian investment companies are close to the Kremlin and may be willing to cede their business interests to government priorities."

    But the report expressed concern that control of Internet content could be the ultimate goal.

    "The Kremlin has taken notice of the increasing significance of the Internet and social media sites in particular and has begun enacting laws and policies aimed at giving it greater control. Kremlin-friendly oligarchs, who may also be motivated by the profitability of these sites, have also begun investing heavily into the top social networking and Internet outlets, potentially creating a situation similar to that of the national television networks," which the report notes is under control of the government and friendly oligarchs.

    Digital Sky got particular attention because of its broad control of the Russian Internet. DNI noted that the company is "a dominant force in the Runet," owning the most popular Websites in the former Soviet Union, including Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Georgia, and Armenia as well as others in the Czech Republic and Poland. By some estimates it reported "over 70 percent of all page views in the Russian-language Internet are on its companies' Websites."

    Of particular concern to the DNI was the investment of Alisher Usmanov, one of the country's leading oligarchs. Usmanov controls 35 percent of Digital Sky Technologies, the report stated. The report included comments by Russian Internet experts on Usmanov's connection to the Kremlin, quoting one as saying "Alisher Usmanov is not an investor for whom state interests are an alien concept. …When his structures acquire a media asset, this is seen as a deal that has been done with the state's approval".

    The report added that Usmanov "is considered especially close to President (Dmitry) Medvedev. For a long time he was a top official of Gazprom where Medvedev was chairman."

    Robert Windrem is an investigative producer/special projects for NBC News.

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