By Carol Marin and Don Moseley 
Equipment installations part of Homeland Security program Project Shield began in 2005
CHICAGO — Project Shield was supposed to make  citizens safer. But in the end, the $45-million Homeland Security  program more resembled a disaster, wasting taxpayers' dollars and  failing to make a single citizen more secure.
The failed Cook  County initiative was replete with equipment that failed to work,  missing records and untrained first responders according to a report by  the inspector general of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
The  report, to be released Monday but obtained by The Sun-Times and NBC5  News, found "millions of tax dollars may have been wasted."
Under  Project Shield, two police squad cars in all 128 Cook County suburbs  were to be fitted with cameras capable of feeding live video to a  central command. In addition, fixed mounted cameras were to be installed  to feed pictures in case of a terrorist attack or emergency in Cook  County.
A six-month investigation by the IG found "equipment was not working, was removed, or could not be properly operated."
Investigators  visited 15 municipalities between January and June last year and found  "missing records, improper procurement practices, unallowable costs and  unaccountable inventory items."
Project Shield began under the  administration of Cook County Board President John Stroger. The majority  of the work, however, occurred during the term of his successor and son  Todd Stroger.
Installations began in March 2005. By 2008,  complaints of mismanagement and fraud were raised, led by then County  Commissioners Tony Peraica, Forrest Claypool and Mike Quigley.
In  2009, Quigley, then a congressman (D-5th), asked the Government  Accountability Office to investigate, saying, "We have spent hundreds of  millions of dollars across the country on homeland security. If Project  Shield is any indication, we are less safe."
Sen. Mark Kirk, who  was then a congressman, joined in, complaining to Homeland Security  Director Janet Napolitano that money had been completely wasted and the  department inattentive.
"A Google search of $43-million wasted should come to your attention," Kirk said at a 2010 congressional hearing.
Among  the IG's findings: Cameras in police cars malfunctioned during extreme  hot and cold temperatures, there was a lack of training, and the camera  systems were never adequately tested.
IBM was the initial  contractor for the first two phases of Project Shield. Milwaukee-based  Johnson Controls was brought in for Phase 3. According to the IG's  report, from beginning to end there were technical problems.
Fixed  cameras mounted on poles also were problematic, according to the  report. "These camera often targeted police parking lots, streets and  intersections with questionable homeland security benefits,"  investigators found. Fixed cameras were even placed in police station  lobbies.
Almost from the beginning, some of the 128 suburbs opted  out after technical snafus. And in the end the IG found "32 never had  equipment, 9 left the program" and at the end, just "71 have vehicle  video systems."
The FBI, according to sources, investigated, but no charges have been filed.
The report takes FEMA, the Federal Emergency Management Agency, to task for lack of oversight.
Urban  Areas Security Initiative (UASI) grants were funneled from DHS to the  State and on to Cook County. The report concludes, "FEMA did not  adequately ensure that the State of Illinois effectively monitored Cook  County's expenditures..."
And questions remain. "Both FEMA and the  State need to improve the review process and perform better oversight,"  according to the IG, adding proposed actions to better monitor how  funds are spent "remains unresolved and open."
What is no longer  operational is Project Shield. New County Board President Toni  Preckwinkle ended the program last summer after a very troubled  seven-year history. 
Wednesday, 11 January 2012
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