The face of nearly one
in two American adults are in law enforcement face recognition networks. So whether you like it or not, and without your permission, chances are your
face has been used in some kind of virtual photo lineup used in a criminal
investigation.
That's because those numbers are not only made up of mugshots taken of people arrested by law
enforcement. That's especially true if you live in Florida.
What are we really
talking about here, though, when we say face recognition? Many
criminal defense attorneys, and even the public at large watching television crime dramas,
will know about a photo lineup or even a physical lineup. Typically a police
officer will compile six photographs for a lineup to show a witness, with one
being a known suspect and the other five looking generally similar. Many times
that is not the case, and I’ve successfully defended clients with
highly suggestive and impermissible lineups where the lineup was all but singling out my client.
Nevertheless, the witness will look at those six photos and pick out the one
that he or she is confident committed the act.
As the report defines
it, face recognition is “the automated process of comparing two
images of faces to determine whether they represent the same individual.”
Basically an algorithm is used to “find” a person’s face in a picture
(characteristics and features that are numerically quantified), and then using
the algorithm that “face” is compared with others in a database of other faces
to find a set of matches. The results don't specifically identify a single match, but instead identify a list of candidates or top matches that are then provided to law enforcement.
The report focused on
face identification (as opposed to verification), which seeks to identify an
unknown face. Law enforcement, for example, could stop an individual and snap a
photo using their cellphone or tablet and run the photo on their squad car
computer to determine a match. Other examples include identifying individuals
after arrest (with other cases); identifying suspects during investigations
with images from security cameras or smartphones or social media; and real-time
video surveillance where an image of an individual law enforcement is looking
for is uploaded and compared with faces that are extracted real-time from live
security video feeds (a match would alert a law enforcement officer nearby that
camera). Ultimately, a human determines who the final match is based on the list of candidates.
Image by George C. Palaidis |
Many major police
departments are also now exploring real-time face recognition on live
surveillance camera videos (like the giant cameras you’ll see on street corners
in New York City). This same technology could also be applied to body cameras and dashboard cameras as both are used by more and more law enforcement agencies.
Since there are no laws or rules regarding the use of the technology, most agencies have no
rules prohibiting officers from using face recognition to track individuals
engaging in political, religious, or other protected free speech.
Further, little is done to
ensure that the systems are even accurate, and the human (police officer)
factor utilized to determine if a candidate photo is in fact a match is largely
wrong (typically wrong about half of the time). These systems also tend to disproportionately affect African Americans.
Here in Florida the
Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office has a system called FACES (Face Analysis Comparison & Examination System) that searches over 33 million
faces, including 22 million Florida driver’s license and ID photos and over 11
million law enforcement photos. Florida law enforcement can also search the FBI’s
database of 24.9 million mug shots. Using the system, the FBI’s Florida field
office and 243 other local, state, and federal agencies run close to 8,000
monthly searches without requiring even a reasonable suspicion before running a
search!
Regardless of whether you've committed a crime or not, Florida law enforcement
agencies are using your driver’s license photo (along with other photographs)
to create a virtual line-up when looking for the identity of a suspect accused of a crime. And you have no say in the matter.
You may ask ‘what’s the
big deal if I’m not guilty of anything?’ Well, an experiment was conducted by a professor at Michigan
State University which ran police security camera photos of the Tsarnaev brothers, who
committed the Boston Marathon bombings, against a database of a million driver’s
licenses. The system did find the younger brother in a match of 10 possible candidates, but it also
identified nine other people who were clearly not guilty. What would have
happened if law enforcement had used that system in searching for the bombers and showed up at the
homes of the nine other people?
We already run into the same
problem with eye witness identification and photo lineups. I once successfully
represented a client accused of armed robbery who was “identified” using a
drawing from a police sketch artist based on the description from the victims.
Another officer thought the sketch resembled my client, and he was arrested
solely on that identification. Needless to say, the sketch looked
nothing like my client. But he was stuck in jail for months as I had to gather the
evidence to prove to the prosecutor that my client was innocent. Even after
passing a polygraph, the prosecutor was unwilling to dismiss the case. On the
eve of trial the proper decision was made and the case was dropped, but during
that time period my innocent client had to sit in jail where he couldn’t work,
pay bills, be with his family, and had suffer the stigma of this serious criminal
charge.
These same problems can
and will arise as law enforcement agencies move headstrong into face recognition
technology and systems without any guidance, laws, or regulations keeping it in check. The report makes several recommendations, including: passing comprehensive
laws regulating law enforcement’s use of face recognition; that police should not
run face recognition searches of license photos without clear legislative
approval; that accuracy tests should be created and expanded to ensure the highest
accuracy with the systems; and that community leaders should press for policies
and legislation that protect privacy, civil liberties, and civil rights.
George Palaidis is a criminal defense and civil business attorney practicing in Miami, Fort Lauderdale and the South Florida region.
No comments:
Post a Comment