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In October of 1994, Congress took action to protect public safety and ensure national security by enacting the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA).
Due to an exemption for “Informational Services” in the original legislation, the FBI, DOJ and DEA filed a petition with the FCC asking them to include the now pervasive use of IP technologies under CALEA requirements. In response, the FCC issued two Report and Orders requiring all “facilities based broadband” providers and all “interconnected VoIP” providers to come into compliance with CALEA by May 14, 2007.
Intelleq CALEA Compliance Services - CAPTURE™
Title III, CALEA, USA PATRIOT Act, Homeland Security Act, and Patriot II, the regulations associated with lawful interception and subpoena processing, are generating increasing volumes of requests to service providers.
The cost and complexity of compliance with government regulations for lawful assistance is a continuing burden for communications companies. Intelleq's CAPTURE™ services are a cost-effective alternative to self-deployment for meeting legal, technical, and operational requirements.
Intelleq operates as a Trusted Third Party (TTP) assisting service providers in meeting the legal, technical and operational requirements for lawful assistance and legal interception as required by the Communications
Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA). Intelleq's CAPTURE™ service is a managed service that provides
a reliable, end-to-end solution that can help carriers achieve compliance quickly in both traditional and packet-based network deployments.
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CALEA Compliance: Behind the Recent FCC Order