The Palm Beach Post

Facial recognitio­n tech advances

- Associated Press

JACKSONVIL­LE — A smalltime drug case in Florida has become the poster child of the debate over whether law enforcemen­t agencies should be using facial recognitio­n technology to make arrests.

Legal researcher­s say the arrest of Willie Lynch is the c a s e t h a t h a s d e a l t most directly, and broadly, with facial recognitio­n technology. Lynch was charged with selling crack cocaine to undercover officers who took his photo with a smartphone.

The Florida Times-Union r e p o r t e d S u n d a y t h a t a researcher at the Georgetown Center on Privacy and Technology is using court records from the case to educate public defenders on how the technology could apply to criminal cases.

“So far it’s the case that has dealt most directly and most broadly with facial recognitio­n,” said Clare Garvie, a researcher at the Georgetown center.

“This is the first time that we actually have a case where the court is considerin­g what to do with it.”

The Jacksonvil­le Sheriff ’s Office in November couldn’t identify any policies guiding its use of the facial recognitio­n software and declined to discuss the technology in detail.

Lynch’s encounter with the facial recognitio­n technology started in 2015 when he approached two undercover narcotic officers and offered to sell them $50 worth of crack cocaine. The officers managed to snap an image of Lynch but didn’t make an immediate arrest.

A couple of weeks later when they decided to pursue the case, all they had was the address where the transactio­n took place and the nickname Lynch had given them, “Midnight.”

They sent a photo to the Sheriff ’s Office Crime Analysis Unit, and the unit sent back Lynch as a potential match.

Researcher­s at the Georgetown center said that facial recognitio­n technology is less accurate than fingerprin­ting.

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