Jamaica Gleaner

Passport fraud worry: Arrests surge in 2019.

Arrests surge in 2019

- Judana Murphy/Gleaner Writer judana.murphy@gleanerjm.com

MORE THAN 375 cases of identity duplicatio­n have been detected by the Passport, Immigratio­n and Citizenshi­p Agency (PICA) since the start of the year.

Eighty-one cases were identified in the last three months and have been submitted to the agency’s Investigat­ion and Surveillan­ce Unit (ISU).

Of the cases that have been identified,170 people have been arrested since the start of the year. Between 2016 and 2017, more than 156 people were arrested. No data were provided for 2018. That means that this year’s arrests have more than doubled the average for the last two years for which data are on record.

The US$1.38-million facial-recognitio­n system, which has biometric software capable of identifyin­g a specific individual in a digital image, was implemente­d in 2015.

PICA CEO Andrew Wynter says the system has allowed the agency to quickly detect cases of identity fraud and has increased the integrity of Jamaica’s passports.

“Because they know that we have a robust system, in terms of security, they know that the genuinenes­s and the integrity of the document is good,” he told

The Gleaner.

“It has been very good to us. It has certainly helped to clean up the passport system ... . One of the big threats in the world today is identity theft. One of the things we had found in our system is that you had people who, for various reasons applied for a passport, maybe didn’t get through and they obtained another passport in another name,” he explained.

ONLINE RENEWAL

Yesterday, the agency, which falls under the Ministry of National Security, launched an online renewal portal for adult passports issued after September 2001.

Adults who were minors when their last passport was issued are not eligible to use the services.

Notably, renewals are only allowed if the passport has expired or will expire in one year.

Delivery is offered through courier services within seven working days for local applicants and 20 working days for overseas applicants. Applicants can also make the renewal applicatio­n online and pick up at a local PICA office.

Wynter said that online applicatio­ns will undergo the same quality and security checks to ensure that the applicant is the correct owner of the passport.

“When you go online, it will still go through facial recognitio­n because we have a picture of [the applicant] ... . We will check you, and if there’s an issue, then you will be contacted and advised, and someone from the investigat­ions and surveillan­ce unit will reach out to you,” said Wynter.

 ??  ??
 ?? IAN ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Andrew Wynter (left), CEO of the Passport, Immigratio­n and Citizenshi­p Agency, discusses the the new passport online applicatio­n portal that was launched at The Jamaica Pegasus hotel in New Kingston on Wednesday.
IAN ALLEN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Andrew Wynter (left), CEO of the Passport, Immigratio­n and Citizenshi­p Agency, discusses the the new passport online applicatio­n portal that was launched at The Jamaica Pegasus hotel in New Kingston on Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica