Department of Justice Tribal Access Program Will Continue to
Improve the Exchange of Critical Data
The Department of Justice announced 15 additional American
Indian tribes selected to participate in the expansion of the Tribal Access
Program for National Crime Information (TAP), a program to provide federally
recognized tribes the ability to access and exchange data with national crime
information databases for both civil and criminal purposes.
These TAP deployments are part of the Justice Department’s
Task Force on Crime Reduction and Public Safety, allowing tribes to more
effectively serve and protect their communities by ensuring the exchange of
critical data.
“The Tribal Access Program provides tribal governments
access to federal crime information databases containing highly useful
information, such as criminal background records, outstanding warrants, and
domestic violence protection orders,” said Deputy Attorney General Rod
Rosenstein. “When federal, state, and
tribal governments share information, it makes communities and law enforcement
officers safer. It helps solve crimes
and protect people from being victimized.”
The TAP Team is pleased to announce that the following
tribes have been selected for the next phase of TAP:
The Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma
Colorado River Indian Tribes of the Colorado River Indian
Reservation, Arizona and California
Lummi Tribe of the Lummi Reservation (Washington)
Mashantucket Pequot Indian Tribe (Connecticut)
Mescalero Apache Tribe of the Mescalero Reservation, New
Mexico
Pueblo of Acoma, New Mexico
Red Lake Band of Chippewa Indians, Minnesota
Sac and Fox Tribe of the Mississippi in Iowa
Yavapai-Apache Nation of the Camp Verde Indian Reservation,
Arizona
Zuni Tribe of the Zuni Reservation, New Mexico
Kootenai Tribe of Idaho
Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians (Mississippi)
Nez Perce Tribe (Idaho)
Passamaquoddy Tribe (Maine)
Round Valley Indian Tribes, Round Valley Reservation,
California
TAP is primarily funded by the Office of Sex Offender
Sentencing, Monitoring, Apprehending, Registering, and Tracking (SMART) and the
Office of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS). TAP prioritized selection of tribes that had
a tribal sex offender registry pursuant to the Adam Walsh Act and are currently
unable to directly submit data to national crime information databases; and/or
had a tribal law enforcement agency that will use TAP to access the National
Criminal Information Center (NCIC), Next Generation Identification (NGI), and other national databases to both view and
enter information.
TAP is currently deployed to 32 tribes with over 160 tribal
criminal justice and civil agencies participating. The service provides
software to enable tribes to access national crime information databases and/or
a kiosk-workstation that provides the ability to submit and query
fingerprint-based transactions via FBI’s Next Generation Identification (NGI)
for both criminal and civil purposes.
Success stories from the past two years include:
Recovered safely a
vulnerable adult kidnap victim and captured the alleged kidnapper through the
use of the National Data Exchange (N-DEx).
Identified a
previously unknown active warrant issued by another jurisdiction, on a sex
offender during the routine process of registering that offender
Stopped a known
drug user with mental problems, who was found incompetent to stand trial, from purchasing
a weapon
Prevented a person
convicted of domestic violence from purchasing a firearm after the police
department identified an imminent threat to former spouse
Completed entry of
information on all sex offenders on tribal registries into both NGI (with
fingerprint, palm prints, mug shots) and NCIC’s National Sex Offender
Registration (NSOR) file so sex offender status will be obvious to anyone
running a subsequent NCIC check or fingerprint-based background check
TAP enhances tribal efforts to register sex offenders
pursuant to the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (SORNA); have
orders of protection enforced off-reservation; protect children; keep firearms
away from persons who are disqualified from receiving them; improve the safety
of public housing, and allow tribes to enter their arrests and convictions into
national databases.
TAP supports tribes in analyzing their needs for national
crime information and includes appropriate solutions, including
a-state-of-the-art biometric/biographic kiosk workstation with capabilities to
process finger and palm prints, take mugshots and submit records to national
databases, as well as the ability to access CJIS systems for criminal and civil
purposes through the Department of Justice’s Criminal Justice Information
Network. TAP, which is managed by the Department of Justice Chief Information
Officer, provides specialized training and assistance for participating tribes,
including computer-based training and on-site instruction, as well as a 24x7
Help Desk.
For more information on TAP, visit
www.justice.gov/tribal/tribal-access-program-tap
For more information about the Justice Department’s work on
tribal justice and public safety issues, visit:
www.justice.gov/tribal
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