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    BATS speed data-gathering process

    BATS speed data-gathering process

    Photo By 1st Lt. Chad Cooper | Staff Sgt. Orrin Thompson, of Clark Fork, Idaho, assigned as the 1-77 AR S-2 Senior...... read more read more

    01.06.2010

    Courtesy Story

    367th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment

    By 1st Lt. Chad Cooper

    Like technology from the latest spy movie, a system using finger prints and retina scans helps Soldiers tell the difference between the good guys and the bad guys. The Biometrics Automated Toolset System, otherwise known as BATS, is a database which assists in finding insurgents and other wanted individuals.

    The system takes finger prints and retina scans and stores them with information like names, pictures and background information to form an individual profile. The profile provides information about an individual's past records, if the person has been previously detained, where they've worked or whether or not they are wanted for illegal activity.

    BATS also has benefits for friendly forces.

    The BATS system is used for a variety of missions, for example prior to conducting a rescue operation; the rescue team will download digital biometric files and associated biographical information on a captive from the authoritative source to confirm the individual's identity. In worst case scenarios an isolated person may be found in a group; here the BATS is employed to clearly identify the proper person to rescue. Using a hand-held biometric device, the team immediately matches one sample to the fingerprint of the person they were sent to recover.

    "The team is able to extract the individual to a safe area, secure in the knowledge that they have rescued the right person," said Staff Sgt. Orrin Thompson, 1st Battalion, 77th Armor Regiment's senior intelligence analyst from Clark Fork, Idaho.

    Using biometrics, hostage rescue teams can more quickly and accurately be sure that they have the right person. Prior to BATS it took days or weeks to record vital information about personnel that could be transferred to other units. Now, the process takes a relatively scant 12 to 90 minutes to obtain data. The system is user-driven, however. The amount of information found in the database is dependent on how much data previous operators or administrators have entered into the system.

    "The system is very user friendly. This equipment allows Soldiers to gather data on personnel in a short period of time that we would not have otherwise known without coordinating with other units making our job a little easier," said Thompson.

    The improvements with technology being placed in the Soldiers' hands on the battlefield ensure that we are ready to adapt and overcome the continuous changes in modern combat.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 01.06.2010
    Date Posted: 01.06.2010 07:59
    Story ID: 43481
    Location:

    Web Views: 480
    Downloads: 362

    PUBLIC DOMAIN