Facial recognition helped jail a Black man in Georgia for nearly a week after cops got a warrant in Louisiana, a state he says he has never visited

Maxxam

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Cacs think we all look alike and so does the software they develop


Police in Louisiana reportedly relied on an incorrect facial recognition match to secure warrants to arrest a Black man for thefts he did not commit.

Randal Reid, 28, was in jail for almost a week after the false match led to his arrest, according to a report published Monday on NOLA.com, the website of the Times-Picayune/New Orleans Advocate newspaper. Reid told the newspaper that he had never even been to Louisiana:

Local police pulled over Reid on Nov. 25 as he drove on Interstate 20 in DeKalb County, Georgia, headed to a late Thanksgiving celebration with his mother, he said.
"They told me I had a warrant out of Jefferson Parish. I said, 'What is Jefferson Parish?,'" Reid said. "I have never been to Louisiana a day in my life. Then they told me it was for theft. So not only have I not been to Louisiana, I also don't steal."
Reid was booked into the DeKalb County jail as a fugitive but was let go on Dec. 1, a jail official said.
Reid's lawyer, Tommy Calogero, said that Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office detectives "tacitly" admitted the error and rescinded the warrant, the report said. "I think they realized they went out on a limb making an arrest based on a face," Calogero said.

Describing his time in jail, Reid said he was "not eating, not sleeping. I'm thinking about these charges. Not doing anything because I don't know what's really going on the whole time. They didn't even try to make the right ID."

The case reportedly began with a June 2022 theft of more than $10,000 worth of Chanel and Louis Vuitton purses in Metairie, Louisiana. Calogero said it wouldn't have been hard to determine that Reid wasn't the culprit, who was reportedly "caught on camera in June entering numbers from a stolen credit card at the register" in the store.


A mole on Reid's face was one of the differences that ultimately forced police to release him, Calogero said. Calogero also "estimated a 40-pound difference between Reid and the purse thief he saw in surveillance footage," the Times-Picayune/New Orleans Advocate report said. The culprit, unlike Reid, had "flabby arms."

"Police could have checked his height and weight
or made an effort to speak to him or asked to walk through his house to look for evidence. He would have complied," Calogero told the newspaper.

It's not clear exactly what facial recognition was used in this case. In previous cases, Jefferson Parish Sheriff Joe Lopinto's office requested facial recognition analyses through the Louisiana State Analytic and Fusion Exchange in Baton Rouge, which uses Clearview AI and MorphoTrak systems, the report said.

Clearview software compares faces to pictures on social media and many other sources. "Our platform, powered by facial recognition technology, includes the largest known database of 30+ billion facial images sourced from public-only web sources, including news media, mugshot websites, public social media, and other open sources," the company's website says.

The Times-Picayune/New Orleans Advocate report indicates that the wrong facial recognition match led to two warrants for Reid's arrest. The first was obtained by the Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office, and the second was for a separate crime being investigated by Baton Rouge police.

"A Baton Rouge Police Department detective then adopted JPSO's identification of Reid to secure an arrest warrant alleging he was among three men involved in another luxury purse theft the same week at a shop on Jefferson Highway, court records show," the Times-Picayune/New Orleans Advocate report said.
The report said Lopinto's office did not respond to requests for information and "denied a formal request for the July 18 arrest warrant for Reid and copies of policies or purchases related to facial recognition, citing an ongoing investigation." The separate warrant obtained by Baton Rouge police "does not say how Lopinto's office identified Reid," the report said.

We contacted the Sheriff's office today and will update this article if we get any new information.

Privacy concerns and evidence of bias in facial recognition systems have fueled a movement to ban government use of the technology. "Facial recognition software is particularly bad at recognizing African-Americans and other ethnic minorities, women, and young people, often misidentifying or failing to identify them, disparately impacting certain groups," the Electronic Frontier Foundation says.
 
:smh:


Due to a lack of transparency, we don’t know how many people have been put in jail thanks to facial recognition, but according to the report, the number is growing. Law enforcement often fails to disclose when facial recognition is used in an investigation, which a problem for defendants in legal cases, because they can’t dispute evidence derived from flawed technology if they don’t know about it. The report argues that the results of facial recognition are so unreliable that they should be considered Brady material—a legal term for evidence that prosecutors are required to disclose because it helps defendants.
 
Wonder where they got their software from. Probably not enough data in it to recognize black people. As with most software they call A.I. This will only be fixed when we take humans out of the equation when developing AI software.
 
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so these motherfuckers can issue an arrest warrant for anyone anywhere in the country based on whatever fucked up reason they want?

i stay away from Texas and Louisianna because of their fucked up "law enforcement", but now these racist bastards can reach out to and oppress anyone with an instagram account???
 
Cacs think we all look alike and so does the software they develop


Police in Louisiana reportedly relied on an incorrect facial recognition match to secure warrants to arrest a Black man for thefts he did not commit.

Randal Reid, 28, was in jail for almost a week after the false match led to his arrest, according to a report published Monday on NOLA.com, the website of the Times-Picayune/New Orleans Advocate newspaper. Reid told the newspaper that he had never even been to Louisiana:


Reid's lawyer, Tommy Calogero, said that Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office detectives "tacitly" admitted the error and rescinded the warrant, the report said. "I think they realized they went out on a limb making an arrest based on a face," Calogero said.

Describing his time in jail, Reid said he was "not eating, not sleeping. I'm thinking about these charges. Not doing anything because I don't know what's really going on the whole time. They didn't even try to make the right ID."

The case reportedly began with a June 2022 theft of more than $10,000 worth of Chanel and Louis Vuitton purses in Metairie, Louisiana. Calogero said it wouldn't have been hard to determine that Reid wasn't the culprit, who was reportedly "caught on camera in June entering numbers from a stolen credit card at the register" in the store.


A mole on Reid's face was one of the differences that ultimately forced police to release him, Calogero said. Calogero also "estimated a 40-pound difference between Reid and the purse thief he saw in surveillance footage," the Times-Picayune/New Orleans Advocate report said. The culprit, unlike Reid, had "flabby arms."

"Police could have checked his height and weight
or made an effort to speak to him or asked to walk through his house to look for evidence. He would have complied," Calogero told the newspaper.

It's not clear exactly what facial recognition was used in this case. In previous cases, Jefferson Parish Sheriff Joe Lopinto's office requested facial recognition analyses through the Louisiana State Analytic and Fusion Exchange in Baton Rouge, which uses Clearview AI and MorphoTrak systems, the report said.

Clearview software compares faces to pictures on social media and many other sources. "Our platform, powered by facial recognition technology, includes the largest known database of 30+ billion facial images sourced from public-only web sources, including news media, mugshot websites, public social media, and other open sources," the company's website says.

The Times-Picayune/New Orleans Advocate report indicates that the wrong facial recognition match led to two warrants for Reid's arrest. The first was obtained by the Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office, and the second was for a separate crime being investigated by Baton Rouge police.

"A Baton Rouge Police Department detective then adopted JPSO's identification of Reid to secure an arrest warrant alleging he was among three men involved in another luxury purse theft the same week at a shop on Jefferson Highway, court records show," the Times-Picayune/New Orleans Advocate report said.
The report said Lopinto's office did not respond to requests for information and "denied a formal request for the July 18 arrest warrant for Reid and copies of policies or purchases related to facial recognition, citing an ongoing investigation." The separate warrant obtained by Baton Rouge police "does not say how Lopinto's office identified Reid," the report said.

We contacted the Sheriff's office today and will update this article if we get any new information.

Privacy concerns and evidence of bias in facial recognition systems have fueled a movement to ban government use of the technology. "Facial recognition software is particularly bad at recognizing African-Americans and other ethnic minorities, women, and young people, often misidentifying or failing to identify them, disparately impacting certain groups," the Electronic Frontier Foundation says.
They been saying this..... it fucks up with us blacks



,
 
New Orleans is probably going to finish 2022 as the murder capital of the US and because of that facial recognition technology became a contentious issue at many of our city council meetings because people are searching for a quick solution to the crime rate. Generally, older Black and conservatiave white folks were in favor of it and a sizable amount of younger Black and liberal white folks were against it

This shit happening in the next parish over sort of proves what the younger Black folks and liberal whites were worried about. NOPD neither JPSO are two LE agencies that you don't want to have to deal with.

And as a citizen of New Orleans, I don't want the city hit with another big ass lawsuit.
 
I've long realized, the safest place for a black person is away from these shores. Too many hidden ways to end up in jail (without your fault, where anything can happen to you).

As soon as I can finish setting myself up overseas, I'm leaving this bitch and I'm not coming back. Especially with these trannys taking over lol
 
I've long realized, the safest place for a black person is away from these shores. Too many hidden ways to end up in jail (without your fault, where anything can happen to you).

As soon as I can finish setting myself up overseas, I'm leaving this bitch and I'm not coming back. Especially with these trannys taking over lol

Same here.

I was swatted a couple of months ago when cops showed up and forced me and 67 year old mother out of our home at gun point.

As soon as I'm able to, I'm out this shit hole
 
Same here.

I was swatted a couple of months ago when cops showed up and forced me and 67 year old mother out of our home at gun point.

As soon as I'm able to, I'm out this shit hole
I truly believe it's a miracle to be black in this country and live out your life and not have something negative happen to you/ your family/ someone you know by the system.
 
$$$$$$$

sue the police, the county for using the software, the software company for shitty software, and the owners dog just because.
 
Damn I thought Id be reading about how he cashing that check he received.....

Atlanta be making some fuckin weirdo govt mistakes... I was just reading how

they demolished this bruhs house, it was the WRONG house, and in addition

They sent him a bill for 700 stacks bruh.... I wish I was making this stuff up...

lockin up a bruh for a crime in another state he never been too...

sounds like ATL govt more of a circus than your average

USA clown show State gubment..
 
New Orleans is probably going to finish 2022 as the murder capital of the US and because of that facial recognition technology became a contentious issue at many of our city council meetings because people are searching for a quick solution to the crime rate. Generally, older Black and conservatiave white folks were in favor of it and a sizable amount of younger Black and liberal white folks were against it

This shit happening in the next parish over sort of proves what the younger Black folks and liberal whites were worried about. NOPD neither JPSO are two LE agencies that you don't want to have to deal with.

And as a citizen of New Orleans, I don't want the city hit with another big ass lawsuit.
Quick solution for crime? That’s rich. It’s no wonder that state leads the union in academic failure.
 
Dekalb Co. pulled him over based on facial recognition?
Dog, what part of I don’t drive past Maryland don’t you understand?

Imagine posting “bad things” about southern states only to walk into one pretending that there aren’t programs documenting everything you do and say online. They’ll have your ass hemmed up and given 6000 thousand years just cause. And because you don’t have anyone money, how are you going to defend yourself? With a court appointed lawyer? Those losers? I may as well admit i fucked the judge’s wife and daughter at the same damn time and hooked up his son with a homosexual like i was Ray J.
 
Wonder where they got their software from. Probably not enough data in it to recognize black people. As with most software they call A.I. This will only be fixed when we take humans out of the equation when developing AI software.
from the lowest chinese bidder. that shit will continue to make mistakes for years
 
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