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MSNBC The Beat With Ari Melber September 11, 2019 22:52:00

more to recognize, quote, black faces equally. when you look at that, i think we can put that up, u.s. government test find the top performing facial recognition systems misidentify blacks ten times higher. say for example if you use arrest data and we know black people are overrelated in arrests. that s because more black people are being arrested and with the facial recognition we find these technologies aren t even really tested on black people so they sort of wipe all black people faces as the same. that literally just means at least one arrest was made. it doesn t mean they found sort of the bad guy and there was a conviction. and in baltimore the clearance rate is less than 25% and we spend more than $500 million in

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20190803:11:07:00

jedediah: we have spoke can tom homan last hour. he talked about the reason why border patrol is replacing existing fencing with a wall. take a listen. people are saying, especially in media well you are not building new wall in new location. you are replacing existing fencing. put in strategic locations based okay data, arrest data and intelligence reports from the border patrol. they are being beat. they were dilapidated, falling apart. that s why the border patrol is replacing existing fencing with a new wall that can t be beat. the administration has a plan. it s a strategic plan based on border patrol intelligence. they are doing exactly the right thing, what needs to be done in those areas. griff: what tom is talking about, we just saw two and a half billion being allocated from the department of defense. that s going to be 100 miles of new wall. but there is also some 100 miles of existing barrier that will be replaced. so they are making some progress. pete: a lot of that is

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20190528:01:36:00

yeah. it was a very difficult decision. and something i thought about a lot and talked about. but essentially i was at a point in my career as attorney general where i had embarked on creating a statewide initiative at re-entry around former offenders and it was becoming a model. i started an open data initiative called open justice where i was for the first time of any public of justice publicly sharing arrest data. we were in the middle i created a bureau called the bureau of children s justice because there was no state agency focused on the needs of children and their rights. i wanted to see that through. frankly at the point at which general holder approached me i was concerned that given the state of what was happening in d.c. i wouldn t have as much of an impact and i wanted to see my job through. let s speak truth.

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20190528:04:36:00

and something i thought about a lot and talked about. but essentially, i was at a point in my career as attorney general where i had embarked on creating a statewide initiative around reentry of former offenders and it was becoming a model. i started an open data initiative called open justice where i was for the first time of any department of justice publicly sharing arrest data, deaths in custody, we were in the middle of i created a bureau called the bureau of children s justice, because there was no state agency focused on the needs of children and their rights. and i wanted to see that through. and frankly, at the point in which general holder approached me, i was concerned that, given the state of what was happening in d.c., that i wouldn t be able to have as much of an impact, frankly, and i wanted to see my job through. ee my job through. (woman) when you take align daily,

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - MSNBC - 20190124:02:57:00

phone call to you in 2014. you were attorney general of the state of california and he asked you essentially if you would like to be attorney general of the united states, since he thought that his time in the office should be coming to an end. i can t imagine as a state attorney general or as any level of lawyer saying no, but you said no. yeah, it was a very difficult decision. and something i thought about a lot and talked about, but essentially i was in the i was at a point in my career as attorney general where i had embarked on creating a statewide initiative around re-entry of former offenders and it was becoming a model. i had started an open data initiative called open justice where i was for the first time of any department of justice publicly sharing arrest data, deaths in custody. we were in the middle of i created a bureau called the bureau of children s justice because there was no state agency focused on needs of

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