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Thursday, 08/17/2017 12:02:18 PM

Thursday, August 17, 2017 12:02:18 PM

Post# of 183214
new facebook DD


This is it

So we now know about the alliance with Crucialtrak™.
We now know we have the rights to distribute Crucialtrak BACS™
So I have came down to my own conclusion.
I have been trying to find recent companies that have got a contract with the government for Biometric Scanners.
The ones that they do have are very outdated. There has be no new biometric programs or hardware integrated in a long time.

President Donald Trump’s controversial travel ban called for, among other things, the speedy completion of a “biometric entry-exit tracking system” for all travelers to the United States.
In fact, members of Congress mandated the creation of an enhanced entry-exit database before the attacks of 2001, as part of immigration reform in 1996. After the September 11 attacks, Congress set a 2006 deadline for the implementation the system, and specified that agencies government-wide—not just “scattered units at Homeland Security and the State Department”— should be able to access it. When the federal government missed that deadline, Congress issued a new target for 2009. Eight years later, it still hasn’t happened. There are several obstacles to creating the kind of system that officials in Washington have demanded. The accuracy of biometric identification systems and the cost of building such a system in the first place—plus government-wide computer upgrades that would be required to support its use—are all major considerations. Plus, airlines have so far refused to follow government rules that say they should collect and process biometric data from passengers leaving the United States.

In the meantime, the technological landscape has changed dramatically. Advances in facial recognition software and long-range iris scanning—plus the mass adoption of smartphones—mean that a biometric entry-exit system could be far more expansive in 2017 than when such a system was first proposed.

The idea behind a new biometric entry-exist system is to add layers of authenticating data—fingerprinting, iris scanning, facial recognition—to verify the identity of a person who is leaving the country, matching records against what was collected upon entry.

Obama tried to set up a program, The program was approved during the Obama administration, but never enacted. Now Trump wants it enacted. When the President’s chief strategist has ‘finally complete the biometric entry/exit’ on his whiteboard of top priorities, the airline industry should take note.

Also Biometrics are going to be used for Airlines “Biometrics could eliminate the need for the physical or electronic boarding pass in the years ahead.”
We also know that Crucialtrak BACS™ is touch less so that means no germs.

Now, a new project by the US is poised to bring those same systems to every international airport in America. It is called Biometric Exit.

The project would use facial matching systems to identify every visa holder as they leave the country. Passengers would have their photos taken immediately before boarding, to be matched with the passport-style photos provided with the visa application. If there’s no match in the system, it could be evidence that the visitor entered the country illegally. The system is currently being tested on a single flight from Atlanta to Tokyo. The most recent proposal was set in motion by former DHS chief Jeh Johnson, who planned for a rollout by the beginning of 2018 — but President Trump has sped up that process, making the program a central part of his aggressive border security policy.

This is important

The president’s executive immigration order on January 27th — best known for suspending all visitors to the US from seven majority-Muslim countries — also included a clause expediting biometric exit, with three progress reports to be made over the next year.
As recently as February, CBP was still weighing four different methods for Biometric Exit, including fingerprint and iris-based systems.
Crucialtrak is a leading designer and manufacturer of an all touchless, 4-in-1 multi-biometric access control system with patents related to TOUCHLESS fingerprints, hand vein recognition, facial recognition, and iris recognition.

CrucialTrak will contribute IT integration services on Bravatek's US government SEWP (Solutions for Enterprise Wide Procurement) contract vehicle to enable both the US military and civilian agencies access to their unique capabilities. By including it in its "product line-up and promotional toolbox", Bravatek has the potential to be the rapid conduit for new orders through various government agencies.

CrucialTrak's IT solution packages are designed to help identify who is entering a facility and who has left. Kind of sounds like a airport.

CrucialTrak also has a product called SpeedTrak™. On the site it says "SpeedTrak™ the thinnest gate systems in the industry, maximizes space efficiency and passenger throughput."
That sounds even more like a airport. I'm coming to the conclusion CrucialTrak is going to be installed in airports across the United States. As well as government agency buildings. This will also be global because records need to be transported country to country. Now I understand the NATO deals.

Now I have a government article with 2 editors. Tom is one of them. They mention Biometric scanners multiple times in that.
https://www.dhs.gov/…/st_harnessing_the_value_of_the_privat…

Biometrics is this future. This is massive.

Now what better person to distribute this other then Tom. Nobody!
EVERYTHING CrucialTrak can be installed in airports! And remember this is not the only alliance Bravatek has!

Here is the letter Tom and a couple people sent to Trump http://bravatek.com/…/The_Value_of_Interoperability_April20…

Here is a YouTube video of Trump speaking about Biometrics "Which we need desperately"

I have came to the conclusion this is what's happening. If you feel I am wrong let me know
You guys are welcome!






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