Dayton Daily News

Nevada DMV nabs criminal with facial recognitio­n technology

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A man who LAS VEGAS — fled federal custody more than 25 years ago couldn’t escape new-age crime fighting, thanks to facial recognitio­n technology.

The Nevada Department of Motor Vehicles said it nabbed 64-year-old Robert Frederick Nelson in June as he tried to renew his state identifica­tion card. Nelson has since been turned over to the federal Bureau of Prisons. He is expected to serve his remaining sentence and additional time for fleeing federal custody in 1992.

Federal authoritie­s aren’t clear on how Nelson fell through the cracks for so long, said Chris Clifford, a spokesman for the U.S. Marshals Service in Minneapoli­s.

“We almost had to rebuild the entire case,” he said.

Nevada DMV spokesman Kevin Malone said a technician processing Nelson’s paperwork at the North Las Vegas station called agency investigat­ors after noticing something suspicious about him. Nelson’s left the DMV unaware a full-scale probe would follow by officers in the department’s Compliance Enforcemen­t Division who investigat­e identity theft and related issues.

“The facial recognitio­n was only part of it. It was good, old-fashioned police work,” Malone said.

The investigat­ors discovered Nelson’s ID card photo resembled another man: Craig James Pautler, who had a commercial driver’s license and a state ID card dating back to 1993. Nelson began using his true identity in 2013 when he got an ID card under his real name, which he attempted to renew last month. In Nevada, people apply for identifica­tion in person and leave with a paper detailing their informatio­n. The DMV processes the applicatio­n, and if approved will mail the identifica­tion card to the applicant.

In the case involving Nelson, the resemblanc­e between the two identities prompted investigat­ors to run his criminal history. They found felony conviction­s under both names, and that he had eluded federal authoritie­s in Minnesota for decades. Nevada officials called to inform him of a problem with his applicatio­n and asked him to return to the DMV office, where he was arrested June 20.

Malone said the DMV has used a facial recognitio­n technology since 2008, after moving to a central processing system for all state-issued ID cards to tighten security. The technology is strictly for mug shots and isn’t the higher-tech type that can pick people out of a group. The facial recognitio­n software shows possible matching faces, allowing the DMV to further scrutinize applicatio­ns.

Malone said most cases just link similar-looking photos but the department catches ID fraud two to three times a month.

“We’ve caught a lot of ID theft and ID fraud cases,” said Malone. “This is the first time I’m aware of that we’ve captured an escaped prisoner.”

The program predates the state’s compliance with the federal Real ID Act of 2005, which required all states to enhance ID standards.

The process and regulation­s for state IDs were more lenient before 9/11, which Malone said is probably how Nelson got his other identifica­tion documents.

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 ??  ?? Robert Nelson escaped from a Minnesota federal prison in 1992 and had been on the run ever since.
Robert Nelson escaped from a Minnesota federal prison in 1992 and had been on the run ever since.

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