Privacy Act of 1974; Systems of Records, 13309-13312 [2018-05656]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 60 / Wednesday, March 28, 2018 / Notices
description of the records sought and
must include the requester’s full name,
current address, and date and place of
birth. The request must be signed and
either notarized or submitted under
penalty of perjury.
Although no specific form is required,
you may obtain forms for this purpose
from the FOIA/Privacy Act Mail Referral
Unit, United States Department of
Justice, 950 Pennsylvania Avenue NW,
Washington, DC 20530, or on the
Department of Justice website at https://
www.justice.gov/oip/oip-request.html.
More information regarding the
Department’s procedures for accessing
records in accordance with the Privacy
Act can be found at 28 CFR part 16
Subpart D, ‘‘Protection of Privacy and
Access to Individual Records Under the
Privacy Act of 1974.’’
CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES:
Individuals seeking to contest or
amend records maintained in this
system of records must direct their
requests to the address indicated in the
RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES
section, above. All requests to contest or
amend records must be in writing and
the envelope and letter should be
clearly marked ‘‘Privacy Act
Amendment Request.’’ All requests
must state clearly and concisely what
record is being contested, the reasons
for contesting it, and the proposed
amendment to the record.
More information regarding the
Department’s procedures for amending
or contesting records in accordance with
the Privacy Act can be found at 28 CFR
16.46, ‘‘Requests for Amendment or
Correction of Records.’’
NOTIFICATION PROCEDURES:
Individuals may be notified if a record
in this system of records pertains to
them when the individuals request
information utilizing the same
procedures as those identified in the
RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES
section, above.
EXEMPTIONS PROMULGATED FOR THE SYSTEM:
None.
HISTORY:
None.
[FR Doc. 2018–05971 Filed 3–27–18; 8:45 am]
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BILLING CODE 4410–18–P
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
[CPCLO Order No. 002–2018]
Privacy Act of 1974; Systems of
Records
Office of Inspector General,
United States Department of Justice.
AGENCY:
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ACTION:
Notice of a new system of
records.
Pursuant to the Privacy Act of
1974 and Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) Circular No. A–108,
notice is hereby given that the Office of
Inspector General (OIG), a component
within the United States Department of
Justice (DOJ or Department), is
publishing a new system of records
notice titled ‘‘Data Analytics Program
Records System,’’ JUSTICE/OIG–006.
OIG proposes to establish this system of
records to assist with the performance of
audits, investigations, and reviews, and
to accommodate the requirements of the
Digital Accountability and
Transparency Act of 2014 (DATA Act).
DATES: In accordance with 5 U.S.C.
552a(e)(4) and (11), this notice is
applicable upon publication, subject to
a 30-day period in which to comment
on the routine uses, described below.
Therefore, please submit any comments
by April 27, 2018.
ADDRESSES: The public, OMB, and
Congress are invited to submit any
comments by mail to the United States
Department of Justice, Office of Privacy
and Civil Liberties, ATTN: Privacy
Analyst, National Place Building, 1331
Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Suite 1000,
Washington, DC 20530; by facsimile at
202–307–0693; or by email at
privacy.compliance@usdoj.gov. To
ensure proper handling, please
reference the above CPCLO Order No.
on your correspondence.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
William Blier, General Counsel, Office
of the General Counsel, Office of the
Inspector General, Department of
Justice, 950 Pennsylvania Avenue NW,
Washington, DC 20530, (202) 514–3435.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Under the
Inspector General Act of 1978, as
amended, Inspectors General, including
the DOJ Inspector General, are
responsible for conducting, supervising,
and coordinating audits and
investigations relating to programs and
operations of the Federal agency for
which their office is established to
recognize and mitigate fraud, waste, and
abuse. This system of records facilitates
OIG’s performance of its statutory
responsibility by implementing a data
analytics (DA) program to assist with
the performance of OIG audits,
investigations, and reviews, and
accommodate the requirements of the
DATA Act, Public Law 113–101, 128
Stat. 1146.
The DA program will provide OIG:
Timely insights from the data already
stored in DOJ databases that OIG has
legal authorization to access and
SUMMARY:
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maintain; the ability to monitor and
analyze data for patterns and
correlations that signal wasteful,
fraudulent, or abusive activities
impacting Department performance and
operations; the ability to find, acquire,
extract, manipulate, analyze, connect,
and visualize data; the capability to
manage vast amounts of data; the ability
to identify significant information that
can improve decision quality; and the
ability to mitigate risk of waste, fraud,
and abuse. The DA program will also
allow the OIG to obtain technology to
develop risk indicators that can analyze
large volumes of data and help focus
OIG’s efforts to combat waste, fraud, and
abuse. OIG intends to use statistical and
mathematical techniques to identify
areas to conduct audits and identify
activities that may indicate whether an
investigation is warranted. The
information maintained within this
system of records will be limited to only
information that OIG has legal
authorization to collect and maintain as
part of its responsibility to conduct,
supervise, and coordinate audits and
investigations of Department programs
and operations to recognize and mitigate
fraud, waste, and abuse.
Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(b)(12),
records maintained in this system of
records may be disclosed to a consumer
reporting agency without the prior
written consent of the individual to
whom the record pertains. Such
disclosure will only be made in
accordance 31 U.S.C. 3711(e). In
accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552a(r), the
Department has provided a report to
OMB and Congress on this new system
of records.
Dated: March 15, 2018.
Katherine Harman-Stokes,
Deputy Director, Office of Privacy and Civil
Liberties, United States Department of Justice.
JUSTICE/OIG–006
SYSTEM NAME AND NUMBER:
Data Analytics Program Records
System, JUSTICE/OIG–006.
SECURITY CLASSIFICATION:
Classified and Controlled Unclassified
Information.
SYSTEM LOCATION:
Access to these electronic records
includes all Department locations that
the Department’s Office of Inspector
General (OIG) operates or that support
OIG operations, including but not
limited to, 1425 New York Avenue,
Washington, DC 20005. Some or all
system information may also be
duplicated at other locations where the
Department has granted direct access to
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support OIG operations, system backup,
emergency preparedness, and/or
continuity of operations. To determine
the location of particular Data Analytics
Program Records System records,
contact the system manager, whose
contact information is listed in the
‘‘SYSTEM MANAGER(S)’’ paragraph,
below.
SYSTEM MANAGER(S):
Director, Office of Data Analytics,
Office of the Inspector General,
Department of Justice, 1425 New York
Avenue NW, Suite 10008, Washington,
DC 20530, telephone: 202–353–7493.
AUTHORITY FOR MAINTENANCE OF THE SYSTEM:
Inspector General Act of 1978, as
amended, 5 U.S.C. App. 3; DATA Act,
31 U.S.C. 3521 et seq.; Inspector General
Empowerment Act of 2016, Public Law
114–317, 130 Stat. 1595.
PURPOSE(S) OF THE SYSTEM:
The system will use data that the OIG
has the legal authority to collect and
maintain to perform advanced statistical
and mathematical techniques. The goal
of this work is to identify anomalies in
the data that indicate fraudulent or
inappropriate activity. The work can
also improve audit quality by helping to
identify specific areas for OIG attention.
The product of this work can be used by
the OIG to identify areas to conduct
audits or activities that may indicate
that an investigation is warranted.
CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS COVERED BY THE
SYSTEM:
The categories of individuals covered
by the system include current and
former DOJ employees; DOJ contractors;
recipients of DOJ grants awards or
funds, whether direct or indirect; parties
to DOJ cooperative agreements;
arrestees, fugitives, prisoners, and other
individuals under custody of the United
States Marshals Service (USMS);
prisoner health care service providers
under the USMS Managed Health Care
Contract; and individuals currently or
formerly under the custody of the
Attorney General and/or the Director of
the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP),
including those individuals under
custody for criminal and civil
commitments.
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CATEGORIES OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM:
In connection with its investigative
duties to recognize and mitigate fraud,
waste, and abuse relating to Department
programs and operations, OIG already
maintains records on the following
categories of individuals that will be
maintained in this system of records:
A. Individuals or entities who are or
who have been the subject of
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investigations conducted by the OIG,
including current and former employees
of the DOJ; current and former
consultants, contractors, and
subcontractors with whom the
Department and other federal agencies
have contracted and their employees;
grantees to whom the Department has
awarded grants and their employees;
and such other individuals or entities
whose association with the Department
relates to alleged violation(s) of the
Department’s rules of conduct, the Civil
Service merit system, and/or criminal or
civil law, which may affect the integrity
or physical facilities of the Department.
B. Individuals who are or have been
witnesses, complainants, or informants
in investigations conducted by the OIG.
C. Individuals or entities who have
been identified as potential subjects of
or parties to an OIG investigation.
D. Individuals currently or formerly
under the custody of the Attorney
General and/or BOP and/or USMS.
In connection with its broader
oversight responsibilities relating to
programs and operations of the
Department to recognize and mitigate
fraud, waste, and abuse, OIG will
maintain the following categories of
records:
A. All categories of records relevant to
JUSTICE/DOJ–001—Accounting
Systems for the Department of Justice,
69 FR 31406, 71 FR 142, 75 FR 13575,
82 FR 24147.
B. All categories of records relevant to
JUSTICE/OJP–004—Grants Management
Information System 53 FR 40526, 66 FR
8425, 82 FR 24147.
C. All categories of records relevant to
JUSTICE/USM–005—U.S. Marshals
Service Prisoner Processing and
Population Management-Prisoner
Tracking System (PPM–PTS), 72 FR
33515, 519, 82 FR 24151, 163.
D. All categories of records relevant to
JUSTICE/BOP–005—Inmate Central
Records System, 67 FR 31371, 77 FR
24982, 81 FR 22639, 82 FR 24147.
E. All categories of records relevant to
JUSTICE/JMD–003—Department of
Justice Payroll System, 69 FR 107, 72 FR
51663, 82 FR 24151, 158.
F. Department data files required by
the DATA Act, including but not
limited to sampling of the spending data
submitted in accordance with the DATA
Act.
G. Department charge card data (for
example, travel, purchase, fleet and
integrated card transactions).
H. Federal contract actions whose
estimated value is $3,000 or more, that
may be $3,000 or more, and every
modification to such contract actions
regardless of dollar value.
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I. Single Audit results (for example,
results of a financial or compliance
audit of recipients of Federal funds) and
related Federal award information.
J. BOP medical claim adjudication
data.
K. Department employee worker’s
compensation payment data.
RECORD SOURCE CATEGORIES:
The records within this system of
records are sourced from the following:
the subjects of investigations;
individuals with whom the subjects of
investigations are associated; current
and former Department officers and
employees; Federal, State, local, foreign,
and territorial law enforcement and
non-law enforcement agencies; private
citizens; witnesses; informants; public
source materials; medical product and
service providers; medical claim
processing companies; financial
institutions managing Department credit
card and payroll information; and the
system managers, or individuals acting
on a system manager’s behalf, for the
DOJ systems of records that OIG has
legal authorization to collect and
maintain as part of its responsibility to
conduct, supervise, and coordinate
audits and investigations of Department
programs and operations to recognize
and mitigate fraud, waste, and abuse.
ROUTINE USES OF RECORDS MAINTAINED IN THE
SYSTEM, INCLUDING CATEGORIES OF USERS AND
THE PURPOSES OF SUCH USES:
In addition to those disclosures
generally permitted under 5 U.S.C.
552a(b), all or a portion of the records
or information contained in this system
of records may be disclosed as a routine
use pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(b)(3)
under the circumstances or for the
purposes described below, to the extent
such disclosures are compatible with
the purposes for which the information
was collected:
A. To another Federal Office of the
Inspector General or Federal, state,
local, foreign, territorial, or tribal unit of
government for the purposes of
identifying fraud, waste, abuse, or
improper payments related to Federal
programs, employees, contractors,
grantees, inmates, or beneficiaries.
These activities will be conducted
under the authorities in the Inspector
General Act of 1978, as amended, and
the DATA Act.
B. To any criminal, civil, or regulatory
law enforcement authority (whether
Federal, state, local, territorial, tribal,
foreign, or international) where the
information is relevant to the recipient
entity’s law enforcement
responsibilities.
C. Where a record, either alone or in
conjunction with other information,
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indicates a violation or potential
violation of law—criminal, civil, or
regulatory in nature—the relevant
records may be referred to the
appropriate Federal, state, local,
territorial, tribal, or foreign law
enforcement authority or other
appropriate entity charged with the
responsibility for investigating or
prosecuting such violation or charged
with enforcing or implementing such
law.
D. To complainants and/or victims to
the extent necessary to provide such
persons with information and
explanations concerning the progress
and/or results of the investigation or
case arising from the matters of which
they complained and/or of which they
were a victim.
E. To any person or entity that the
OIG has reason to believe possesses
information regarding a matter within
the jurisdiction of the OIG, to the extent
deemed to be necessary by the OIG in
order to elicit such information or
cooperation from the recipient for use in
the performance of an authorized
activity.
F. In an appropriate proceeding before
a court, grand jury, or administrative or
adjudicative body, when the OIG
determines that the records are arguably
relevant to the proceeding; or in an
appropriate proceeding before an
administrative or adjudicative body
when the adjudicator determines the
records to be relevant to the proceeding.
G. To an actual or potential party to
litigation or the party’s authorized
representative for the purpose of
negotiation or discussion of such
matters as settlement, plea bargaining,
or in informal discovery proceedings.
H. To the news media and the public,
including disclosures pursuant to 28
CFR 50.2, unless it is determined that
release of the specific information in the
context of a particular case would
constitute an unwarranted invasion of
personal privacy.
I. To contractors, grantees, experts,
consultants, students, and others
performing or working on a contract,
service, grant, cooperative agreement, or
other assignment for the Federal
Government, when necessary to
accomplish an agency function related
to this system of records.
J. To designated officers and
employees of Federal, state, local,
territorial, or tribal law enforcement or
detention agencies in connection with
the hiring or continued employment of
an employee or contractor, where the
employee or contractor would occupy or
does occupy a position of public trust as
a law enforcement officer or detention
officer having direct contact with the
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public or with prisoners or detainees, to
the extent that the information is
relevant and necessary to the recipient
agency’s decision.
K. To appropriate officials and
employees of a Federal agency or entity
that requires information relevant to a
decision concerning the hiring,
appointment, or retention of an
employee; the assignment, detail, or
deployment of an employee; the
issuance, renewal, suspension, or
revocation of a security clearance; the
execution of a security or suitability
investigation; the letting of a contract, or
the issuance of a grant or benefit.
L. To a former employee of the
Department for purposes of: Responding
to an official inquiry by a Federal, state,
local, tribal, territorial, or foreign
government entity or professional
licensing authority, in accordance with
applicable Department regulations; or
facilitating communications with a
former employee that may be necessary
for personnel-related or other official
purposes where the Department requires
information and/or consultation
assistance from the former employee
regarding a matter within that person’s
former area of responsibility.
M. To federal, state, local, territorial,
tribal, foreign, or international licensing
agencies or associations which require
information concerning the suitability
or eligibility of an individual for a
license or permit.
N. To a Member of Congress or staff
acting upon the Member’s behalf when
the Member or staff requests the
information on behalf of, and at the
request of, the individual who is the
subject of the record.
O. To the National Archives and
Records Administration for purposes of
records management inspections
conducted under the authority of 44
U.S.C. 2904 and 2906.
P. To appropriate agencies, entities,
and persons when (1) the Department
suspects or has confirmed that there has
been a breach of the system of records;
(2) the Department has determined that
as a result of the suspected or confirmed
breach there is a risk of harm to
individuals, the Department (including
its information systems, programs, and
operations), the Federal Government, or
national security; and (3) the disclosure
made to such agencies, entities, and
persons is reasonably necessary to assist
in connection with the Department
efforts to respond to the suspected or
confirmed breach or to prevent,
minimize, or remedy such harm.
Q. To another Federal agency or
Federal entity, when the Department
determines that information from this
system of records is reasonably
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13311
necessary to assist the recipient agency
or entity in (1) responding to a
suspected or confirmed breach or (2)
preventing, minimizing, or remedying
the risk of harm to individuals, the
recipient agency or entity (including its
information systems, programs, and
operations), the Federal Government, or
national security, resulting from a
suspected or confirmed breach.
R. To a governmental entity lawfully
engaged in collecting law enforcement,
law enforcement intelligence, or
national security intelligence
information, for such purposes.
S. To such recipients and under such
circumstances and procedures as are
mandated by Federal statute or treaty.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR STORAGE OF
RECORDS:
Records are stored in an electronic
form in a framework of computer
systems that allows distributed
processing of data sets across clusters of
computers. Records are stored securely
in accordance with applicable executive
orders, statutes, and agency
implementing recommendations.
Electronic records are stored in
databases and/or on hard disks,
removable storage devices, or other
electronic media.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR RETRIEVAL OF
RECORDS:
Records in this system of records can
be retrieved by name or other
identifiers, including but not limited to:
The surnames of subjects, witnesses,
and/or complainants of an OIG
complaint or investigation; social
security account number; address;
telephone number; OIG-assigned case
numbers; taxpayer identification
number; health care provider; assigned
number given to an individual in
custody with USMS; inmate register
number; alien registration number;
assigned DOJ charge card information;
geo-code location (for example, physical
addresses converted into geographic
coordinates on a map); organizational
name; employee payroll identifier; and
Data Universal Numbering System
(DUNS number).
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR RETENTION AND
DISPOSAL OF RECORDS:
Records in this system are retained
and disposed of in accordance with the
schedule approved by the Archivist of
the United States, Job Number N1–060–
09–025.
ADMINISTRATIVE, TECHNICAL, AND PHYSICAL
SAFEGUARDS:
Both electronic and paper records are
safeguarded in accordance with
appropriate laws, rules, and policies,
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including Department and OIG policies.
The records are protected by physical
security methods and dissemination/
access controls. Direct access is
controlled and limited to approved
personnel with an official need for
access to perform their duties. Paper
files are stored: (1) In a secure room
with controlled access; (2) in locked file
cabinets; and/or (3) in other appropriate
GSA approved security containers.
Protection of information technology
systems is provided by physical,
technical, and administrative
safeguards. Records are located in a
building with restricted access and are
kept in a locked room with controlled
access or are safeguarded with approved
encryption technology. The use of
multifactor authentication is required to
access electronic systems. Information
may be transmitted to routine users on
a need to know basis in a secure manner
and to others upon verification of their
authorization to access the information
and their need to know.
Security personnel conduct periodic
vulnerability scans using DOJ-approved
software to ensure security compliance
and security logs are enabled for all
computers to assist in troubleshooting
and forensic analysis during incident
investigations. Users of individual
computers can only gain access to the
data by a valid user identification
authorization and authentication
method.
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RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES:
All requests for access to records must
be in writing and should be addressed
to the System Manager listed above. The
envelope and letter should be clearly
marked ‘‘Privacy Act Access Request.’’
Alternatively, requests can be emailed
to oigfoia@usdoj.gov. The request must
describe the records sought in sufficient
detail to enable Department personnel
to locate them with a reasonable amount
of effort. The request must include a
general description of the records
sought and must include the requester’s
full name, current address, and date and
place of birth. The request must be
signed and either notarized or submitted
under penalty of perjury. Some
information may be exempt from the
access provisions as described in the
‘‘EXEMPTIONS PROMULGATED FOR
THE SYSTEM’’ paragraph, below. An
individual who is the subject of a record
in this system of records may access
those records that are not exempt from
access. A determination whether a
record may be accessed will be made at
the time a request is received.
Although no specific form is required,
you may obtain forms for this purpose
from the FOIA/Privacy Act Mail Referral
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20:30 Mar 27, 2018
Jkt 244001
Unit, United States Department of
Justice, 950 Pennsylvania Avenue NW,
Washington, DC 20530, or on the
Department of Justice website at https://
www.justice.gov/oip/oip-request.html.
More information regarding the
Department’s procedures for accessing
records in accordance with the Privacy
Act can be found at 28 CFR part 16
subpart D, ‘‘Protection of Privacy and
Access to Individual Records Under the
Privacy Act of 1974.’’
CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES:
NOTIFICATION PROCEDURES:
Individuals may be notified if a record
in this system of records pertains to
them when the individuals request
information utilizing the same
procedures as those identified in the
‘‘RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES’’
paragraph, above.
EXEMPTIONS PROMULGATED FOR THE SYSTEM:
The Attorney General plans to exempt
this system from subsections (c)(3) and
(4); (d); (e)(1), (2), (3), (5) and (8); and
(g) of the Privacy Act pursuant to 5
U.S.C. 552a(j)(2). In addition, the system
has been exempted from subsections
(c)(3), (d), and (e)(1) of the Privacy Act,
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(k)(1) and
(k)(2). The exemptions will be applied
only to the extent that the information
in the system is subject to exemption
pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(j)(2), (k)(1),
and/or (k)(2). Rules are in the process of
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HISTORY:
None.
[FR Doc. 2018–05656 Filed 3–27–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–58–P
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Office of the Secretary
Individuals seeking to contest or
amend records maintained in this
system of records must direct their
requests to the address indicated in the
‘‘RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES’’
paragraph, above. All requests to contest
or amend records must be in writing
and the envelope and letter should be
clearly marked ‘‘Privacy Act
Amendment Request.’’ All requests
must state clearly and concisely what
record is being contested, the reasons
for contesting it, and the proposed
amendment to the record. Some
information may be exempt from the
amendment provisions as described in
the ‘‘EXEMPTIONS PROMULGATED
FOR THE SYSTEM’’ paragraph, below.
An individual who is the subject of a
record in this system of records may
contest or amend those records that are
not exempt. A determination of whether
a record is exempt from the amendment
provisions will be made after a request
is received.
More information regarding the
Department’s procedures for amending
or contesting records in accordance with
the Privacy Act can be found at 28 CFR
16.46, ‘‘Requests for Amendment or
Correction of Records.’’
PO 00000
being promulgated in accordance with
the requirements of 5 U.S.C. 553(b), (c),
and (e), and will be published in the
Federal Register.
Agency Information Collection
Activities; Submission for OMB
Review; Comment Request; Proximity
Detection Systems for Continuous
Mining Machines in Underground Coal
Mines
Notice of availability; request
for comments.
ACTION:
The Department of Labor
(DOL) is submitting the Mine Safety and
Health Administration (MSHA)
sponsored information collection
request (ICR) titled, ‘‘Proximity
Detection Systems for Continuous
Mining Machines in Underground Coal
Mines,’’ to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) for review and
approval for continued use, without
change, in accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA). Public comments on the ICR are
invited.
DATES: The OMB will consider all
written comments that agency receives
on or before April 27, 2018.
ADDRESSES: A copy of this ICR with
applicable supporting documentation;
including a description of the likely
respondents, proposed frequency of
response, and estimated total burden
may be obtained free of charge from the
RegInfo.gov website at https://
www.reginfo.gov/public/do/
PRAViewICR?ref_nbr=201707-1219-002
(this link will only become active on the
day following publication of this notice)
or by contacting Michel Smyth by
telephone at 202–693–4129, TTY 202–
693–8064, (these are not toll-free
numbers) or by email at DOL_PRA_
PUBLIC@dol.gov.
Submit comments about this request
by mail to the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, Attn: OMB Desk
Officer for DOL–MSHA, Office of
Management and Budget, Room 10235,
725 17th Street NW, Washington, DC
20503; by Fax: 202–395–5806 (this is
not a toll-free number); or by email:
OIRA_submission@omb.eop.gov.
Commenters are encouraged, but not
required, to send a courtesy copy of any
SUMMARY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 60 (Wednesday, March 28, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 13309-13312]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-05656]
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DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
[CPCLO Order No. 002-2018]
Privacy Act of 1974; Systems of Records
AGENCY: Office of Inspector General, United States Department of
Justice.
ACTION: Notice of a new system of records.
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SUMMARY: Pursuant to the Privacy Act of 1974 and Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) Circular No. A-108, notice is hereby given that the
Office of Inspector General (OIG), a component within the United States
Department of Justice (DOJ or Department), is publishing a new system
of records notice titled ``Data Analytics Program Records System,''
JUSTICE/OIG-006. OIG proposes to establish this system of records to
assist with the performance of audits, investigations, and reviews, and
to accommodate the requirements of the Digital Accountability and
Transparency Act of 2014 (DATA Act).
DATES: In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552a(e)(4) and (11), this notice is
applicable upon publication, subject to a 30-day period in which to
comment on the routine uses, described below. Therefore, please submit
any comments by April 27, 2018.
ADDRESSES: The public, OMB, and Congress are invited to submit any
comments by mail to the United States Department of Justice, Office of
Privacy and Civil Liberties, ATTN: Privacy Analyst, National Place
Building, 1331 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Suite 1000, Washington, DC
20530; by facsimile at 202-307-0693; or by email at
[email protected]. To ensure proper handling, please
reference the above CPCLO Order No. on your correspondence.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: William Blier, General Counsel, Office
of the General Counsel, Office of the Inspector General, Department of
Justice, 950 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20530, (202) 514-
3435.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Under the Inspector General Act of 1978, as
amended, Inspectors General, including the DOJ Inspector General, are
responsible for conducting, supervising, and coordinating audits and
investigations relating to programs and operations of the Federal
agency for which their office is established to recognize and mitigate
fraud, waste, and abuse. This system of records facilitates OIG's
performance of its statutory responsibility by implementing a data
analytics (DA) program to assist with the performance of OIG audits,
investigations, and reviews, and accommodate the requirements of the
DATA Act, Public Law 113-101, 128 Stat. 1146.
The DA program will provide OIG: Timely insights from the data
already stored in DOJ databases that OIG has legal authorization to
access and maintain; the ability to monitor and analyze data for
patterns and correlations that signal wasteful, fraudulent, or abusive
activities impacting Department performance and operations; the ability
to find, acquire, extract, manipulate, analyze, connect, and visualize
data; the capability to manage vast amounts of data; the ability to
identify significant information that can improve decision quality; and
the ability to mitigate risk of waste, fraud, and abuse. The DA program
will also allow the OIG to obtain technology to develop risk indicators
that can analyze large volumes of data and help focus OIG's efforts to
combat waste, fraud, and abuse. OIG intends to use statistical and
mathematical techniques to identify areas to conduct audits and
identify activities that may indicate whether an investigation is
warranted. The information maintained within this system of records
will be limited to only information that OIG has legal authorization to
collect and maintain as part of its responsibility to conduct,
supervise, and coordinate audits and investigations of Department
programs and operations to recognize and mitigate fraud, waste, and
abuse.
Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(b)(12), records maintained in this system
of records may be disclosed to a consumer reporting agency without the
prior written consent of the individual to whom the record pertains.
Such disclosure will only be made in accordance 31 U.S.C. 3711(e). In
accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552a(r), the Department has provided a report
to OMB and Congress on this new system of records.
Dated: March 15, 2018.
Katherine Harman-Stokes,
Deputy Director, Office of Privacy and Civil Liberties, United States
Department of Justice.
JUSTICE/OIG-006
SYSTEM NAME AND NUMBER:
Data Analytics Program Records System, JUSTICE/OIG-006.
SECURITY CLASSIFICATION:
Classified and Controlled Unclassified Information.
SYSTEM LOCATION:
Access to these electronic records includes all Department
locations that the Department's Office of Inspector General (OIG)
operates or that support OIG operations, including but not limited to,
1425 New York Avenue, Washington, DC 20005. Some or all system
information may also be duplicated at other locations where the
Department has granted direct access to
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support OIG operations, system backup, emergency preparedness, and/or
continuity of operations. To determine the location of particular Data
Analytics Program Records System records, contact the system manager,
whose contact information is listed in the ``SYSTEM MANAGER(S)''
paragraph, below.
SYSTEM MANAGER(S):
Director, Office of Data Analytics, Office of the Inspector
General, Department of Justice, 1425 New York Avenue NW, Suite 10008,
Washington, DC 20530, telephone: 202-353-7493.
AUTHORITY FOR MAINTENANCE OF THE SYSTEM:
Inspector General Act of 1978, as amended, 5 U.S.C. App. 3; DATA
Act, 31 U.S.C. 3521 et seq.; Inspector General Empowerment Act of 2016,
Public Law 114-317, 130 Stat. 1595.
PURPOSE(S) OF THE SYSTEM:
The system will use data that the OIG has the legal authority to
collect and maintain to perform advanced statistical and mathematical
techniques. The goal of this work is to identify anomalies in the data
that indicate fraudulent or inappropriate activity. The work can also
improve audit quality by helping to identify specific areas for OIG
attention. The product of this work can be used by the OIG to identify
areas to conduct audits or activities that may indicate that an
investigation is warranted.
CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS COVERED BY THE SYSTEM:
The categories of individuals covered by the system include current
and former DOJ employees; DOJ contractors; recipients of DOJ grants
awards or funds, whether direct or indirect; parties to DOJ cooperative
agreements; arrestees, fugitives, prisoners, and other individuals
under custody of the United States Marshals Service (USMS); prisoner
health care service providers under the USMS Managed Health Care
Contract; and individuals currently or formerly under the custody of
the Attorney General and/or the Director of the Federal Bureau of
Prisons (BOP), including those individuals under custody for criminal
and civil commitments.
CATEGORIES OF RECORDS IN THE SYSTEM:
In connection with its investigative duties to recognize and
mitigate fraud, waste, and abuse relating to Department programs and
operations, OIG already maintains records on the following categories
of individuals that will be maintained in this system of records:
A. Individuals or entities who are or who have been the subject of
investigations conducted by the OIG, including current and former
employees of the DOJ; current and former consultants, contractors, and
subcontractors with whom the Department and other federal agencies have
contracted and their employees; grantees to whom the Department has
awarded grants and their employees; and such other individuals or
entities whose association with the Department relates to alleged
violation(s) of the Department's rules of conduct, the Civil Service
merit system, and/or criminal or civil law, which may affect the
integrity or physical facilities of the Department.
B. Individuals who are or have been witnesses, complainants, or
informants in investigations conducted by the OIG.
C. Individuals or entities who have been identified as potential
subjects of or parties to an OIG investigation.
D. Individuals currently or formerly under the custody of the
Attorney General and/or BOP and/or USMS.
In connection with its broader oversight responsibilities relating
to programs and operations of the Department to recognize and mitigate
fraud, waste, and abuse, OIG will maintain the following categories of
records:
A. All categories of records relevant to JUSTICE/DOJ-001--
Accounting Systems for the Department of Justice, 69 FR 31406, 71 FR
142, 75 FR 13575, 82 FR 24147.
B. All categories of records relevant to JUSTICE/OJP-004--Grants
Management Information System 53 FR 40526, 66 FR 8425, 82 FR 24147.
C. All categories of records relevant to JUSTICE/USM-005--U.S.
Marshals Service Prisoner Processing and Population Management-Prisoner
Tracking System (PPM-PTS), 72 FR 33515, 519, 82 FR 24151, 163.
D. All categories of records relevant to JUSTICE/BOP-005--Inmate
Central Records System, 67 FR 31371, 77 FR 24982, 81 FR 22639, 82 FR
24147.
E. All categories of records relevant to JUSTICE/JMD-003--
Department of Justice Payroll System, 69 FR 107, 72 FR 51663, 82 FR
24151, 158.
F. Department data files required by the DATA Act, including but
not limited to sampling of the spending data submitted in accordance
with the DATA Act.
G. Department charge card data (for example, travel, purchase,
fleet and integrated card transactions).
H. Federal contract actions whose estimated value is $3,000 or
more, that may be $3,000 or more, and every modification to such
contract actions regardless of dollar value.
I. Single Audit results (for example, results of a financial or
compliance audit of recipients of Federal funds) and related Federal
award information.
J. BOP medical claim adjudication data.
K. Department employee worker's compensation payment data.
RECORD SOURCE CATEGORIES:
The records within this system of records are sourced from the
following: the subjects of investigations; individuals with whom the
subjects of investigations are associated; current and former
Department officers and employees; Federal, State, local, foreign, and
territorial law enforcement and non-law enforcement agencies; private
citizens; witnesses; informants; public source materials; medical
product and service providers; medical claim processing companies;
financial institutions managing Department credit card and payroll
information; and the system managers, or individuals acting on a system
manager's behalf, for the DOJ systems of records that OIG has legal
authorization to collect and maintain as part of its responsibility to
conduct, supervise, and coordinate audits and investigations of
Department programs and operations to recognize and mitigate fraud,
waste, and abuse.
ROUTINE USES OF RECORDS MAINTAINED IN THE SYSTEM, INCLUDING CATEGORIES
OF USERS AND THE PURPOSES OF SUCH USES:
In addition to those disclosures generally permitted under 5 U.S.C.
552a(b), all or a portion of the records or information contained in
this system of records may be disclosed as a routine use pursuant to 5
U.S.C. 552a(b)(3) under the circumstances or for the purposes described
below, to the extent such disclosures are compatible with the purposes
for which the information was collected:
A. To another Federal Office of the Inspector General or Federal,
state, local, foreign, territorial, or tribal unit of government for
the purposes of identifying fraud, waste, abuse, or improper payments
related to Federal programs, employees, contractors, grantees, inmates,
or beneficiaries. These activities will be conducted under the
authorities in the Inspector General Act of 1978, as amended, and the
DATA Act.
B. To any criminal, civil, or regulatory law enforcement authority
(whether Federal, state, local, territorial, tribal, foreign, or
international) where the information is relevant to the recipient
entity's law enforcement responsibilities.
C. Where a record, either alone or in conjunction with other
information,
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indicates a violation or potential violation of law--criminal, civil,
or regulatory in nature--the relevant records may be referred to the
appropriate Federal, state, local, territorial, tribal, or foreign law
enforcement authority or other appropriate entity charged with the
responsibility for investigating or prosecuting such violation or
charged with enforcing or implementing such law.
D. To complainants and/or victims to the extent necessary to
provide such persons with information and explanations concerning the
progress and/or results of the investigation or case arising from the
matters of which they complained and/or of which they were a victim.
E. To any person or entity that the OIG has reason to believe
possesses information regarding a matter within the jurisdiction of the
OIG, to the extent deemed to be necessary by the OIG in order to elicit
such information or cooperation from the recipient for use in the
performance of an authorized activity.
F. In an appropriate proceeding before a court, grand jury, or
administrative or adjudicative body, when the OIG determines that the
records are arguably relevant to the proceeding; or in an appropriate
proceeding before an administrative or adjudicative body when the
adjudicator determines the records to be relevant to the proceeding.
G. To an actual or potential party to litigation or the party's
authorized representative for the purpose of negotiation or discussion
of such matters as settlement, plea bargaining, or in informal
discovery proceedings.
H. To the news media and the public, including disclosures pursuant
to 28 CFR 50.2, unless it is determined that release of the specific
information in the context of a particular case would constitute an
unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.
I. To contractors, grantees, experts, consultants, students, and
others performing or working on a contract, service, grant, cooperative
agreement, or other assignment for the Federal Government, when
necessary to accomplish an agency function related to this system of
records.
J. To designated officers and employees of Federal, state, local,
territorial, or tribal law enforcement or detention agencies in
connection with the hiring or continued employment of an employee or
contractor, where the employee or contractor would occupy or does
occupy a position of public trust as a law enforcement officer or
detention officer having direct contact with the public or with
prisoners or detainees, to the extent that the information is relevant
and necessary to the recipient agency's decision.
K. To appropriate officials and employees of a Federal agency or
entity that requires information relevant to a decision concerning the
hiring, appointment, or retention of an employee; the assignment,
detail, or deployment of an employee; the issuance, renewal,
suspension, or revocation of a security clearance; the execution of a
security or suitability investigation; the letting of a contract, or
the issuance of a grant or benefit.
L. To a former employee of the Department for purposes of:
Responding to an official inquiry by a Federal, state, local, tribal,
territorial, or foreign government entity or professional licensing
authority, in accordance with applicable Department regulations; or
facilitating communications with a former employee that may be
necessary for personnel-related or other official purposes where the
Department requires information and/or consultation assistance from the
former employee regarding a matter within that person's former area of
responsibility.
M. To federal, state, local, territorial, tribal, foreign, or
international licensing agencies or associations which require
information concerning the suitability or eligibility of an individual
for a license or permit.
N. To a Member of Congress or staff acting upon the Member's behalf
when the Member or staff requests the information on behalf of, and at
the request of, the individual who is the subject of the record.
O. To the National Archives and Records Administration for purposes
of records management inspections conducted under the authority of 44
U.S.C. 2904 and 2906.
P. To appropriate agencies, entities, and persons when (1) the
Department suspects or has confirmed that there has been a breach of
the system of records; (2) the Department has determined that as a
result of the suspected or confirmed breach there is a risk of harm to
individuals, the Department (including its information systems,
programs, and operations), the Federal Government, or national
security; and (3) the disclosure made to such agencies, entities, and
persons is reasonably necessary to assist in connection with the
Department efforts to respond to the suspected or confirmed breach or
to prevent, minimize, or remedy such harm.
Q. To another Federal agency or Federal entity, when the Department
determines that information from this system of records is reasonably
necessary to assist the recipient agency or entity in (1) responding to
a suspected or confirmed breach or (2) preventing, minimizing, or
remedying the risk of harm to individuals, the recipient agency or
entity (including its information systems, programs, and operations),
the Federal Government, or national security, resulting from a
suspected or confirmed breach.
R. To a governmental entity lawfully engaged in collecting law
enforcement, law enforcement intelligence, or national security
intelligence information, for such purposes.
S. To such recipients and under such circumstances and procedures
as are mandated by Federal statute or treaty.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR STORAGE OF RECORDS:
Records are stored in an electronic form in a framework of computer
systems that allows distributed processing of data sets across clusters
of computers. Records are stored securely in accordance with applicable
executive orders, statutes, and agency implementing recommendations.
Electronic records are stored in databases and/or on hard disks,
removable storage devices, or other electronic media.
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR RETRIEVAL OF RECORDS:
Records in this system of records can be retrieved by name or other
identifiers, including but not limited to: The surnames of subjects,
witnesses, and/or complainants of an OIG complaint or investigation;
social security account number; address; telephone number; OIG-assigned
case numbers; taxpayer identification number; health care provider;
assigned number given to an individual in custody with USMS; inmate
register number; alien registration number; assigned DOJ charge card
information; geo-code location (for example, physical addresses
converted into geographic coordinates on a map); organizational name;
employee payroll identifier; and Data Universal Numbering System (DUNS
number).
POLICIES AND PRACTICES FOR RETENTION AND DISPOSAL OF RECORDS:
Records in this system are retained and disposed of in accordance
with the schedule approved by the Archivist of the United States, Job
Number N1-060-09-025.
ADMINISTRATIVE, TECHNICAL, AND PHYSICAL SAFEGUARDS:
Both electronic and paper records are safeguarded in accordance
with appropriate laws, rules, and policies,
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including Department and OIG policies. The records are protected by
physical security methods and dissemination/access controls. Direct
access is controlled and limited to approved personnel with an official
need for access to perform their duties. Paper files are stored: (1) In
a secure room with controlled access; (2) in locked file cabinets; and/
or (3) in other appropriate GSA approved security containers.
Protection of information technology systems is provided by physical,
technical, and administrative safeguards. Records are located in a
building with restricted access and are kept in a locked room with
controlled access or are safeguarded with approved encryption
technology. The use of multifactor authentication is required to access
electronic systems. Information may be transmitted to routine users on
a need to know basis in a secure manner and to others upon verification
of their authorization to access the information and their need to
know.
Security personnel conduct periodic vulnerability scans using DOJ-
approved software to ensure security compliance and security logs are
enabled for all computers to assist in troubleshooting and forensic
analysis during incident investigations. Users of individual computers
can only gain access to the data by a valid user identification
authorization and authentication method.
RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES:
All requests for access to records must be in writing and should be
addressed to the System Manager listed above. The envelope and letter
should be clearly marked ``Privacy Act Access Request.'' Alternatively,
requests can be emailed to [email protected]. The request must describe
the records sought in sufficient detail to enable Department personnel
to locate them with a reasonable amount of effort. The request must
include a general description of the records sought and must include
the requester's full name, current address, and date and place of
birth. The request must be signed and either notarized or submitted
under penalty of perjury. Some information may be exempt from the
access provisions as described in the ``EXEMPTIONS PROMULGATED FOR THE
SYSTEM'' paragraph, below. An individual who is the subject of a record
in this system of records may access those records that are not exempt
from access. A determination whether a record may be accessed will be
made at the time a request is received.
Although no specific form is required, you may obtain forms for
this purpose from the FOIA/Privacy Act Mail Referral Unit, United
States Department of Justice, 950 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington,
DC 20530, or on the Department of Justice website at https://www.justice.gov/oip/oip-request.html.
More information regarding the Department's procedures for
accessing records in accordance with the Privacy Act can be found at 28
CFR part 16 subpart D, ``Protection of Privacy and Access to Individual
Records Under the Privacy Act of 1974.''
CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES:
Individuals seeking to contest or amend records maintained in this
system of records must direct their requests to the address indicated
in the ``RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES'' paragraph, above. All requests to
contest or amend records must be in writing and the envelope and letter
should be clearly marked ``Privacy Act Amendment Request.'' All
requests must state clearly and concisely what record is being
contested, the reasons for contesting it, and the proposed amendment to
the record. Some information may be exempt from the amendment
provisions as described in the ``EXEMPTIONS PROMULGATED FOR THE
SYSTEM'' paragraph, below. An individual who is the subject of a record
in this system of records may contest or amend those records that are
not exempt. A determination of whether a record is exempt from the
amendment provisions will be made after a request is received.
More information regarding the Department's procedures for amending
or contesting records in accordance with the Privacy Act can be found
at 28 CFR 16.46, ``Requests for Amendment or Correction of Records.''
NOTIFICATION PROCEDURES:
Individuals may be notified if a record in this system of records
pertains to them when the individuals request information utilizing the
same procedures as those identified in the ``RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES''
paragraph, above.
EXEMPTIONS PROMULGATED FOR THE SYSTEM:
The Attorney General plans to exempt this system from subsections
(c)(3) and (4); (d); (e)(1), (2), (3), (5) and (8); and (g) of the
Privacy Act pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(j)(2). In addition, the system
has been exempted from subsections (c)(3), (d), and (e)(1) of the
Privacy Act, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(k)(1) and (k)(2). The exemptions
will be applied only to the extent that the information in the system
is subject to exemption pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552a(j)(2), (k)(1), and/or
(k)(2). Rules are in the process of being promulgated in accordance
with the requirements of 5 U.S.C. 553(b), (c), and (e), and will be
published in the Federal Register.
HISTORY:
None.
[FR Doc. 2018-05656 Filed 3-27-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410-58-P