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Gov Greg Abbott Signs Bill Requiring Cash Bail For Some Offenses Into Law
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Prosecutors call on Biden to create task force aimed at reform
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Right On Crime Expanding Into Mississippi
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Congress Asks Experts for Guidance on Facial Recognition
Law enforcement uses facial recognition systems with little oversight and, at times, disastrous impact. During a congressional hearing this week, members and experts talked through how new laws could head off greater harm.
July 14, 2021 • 1/1: Robert Williams testified during a July 13, 2021 hearing about his undeserved arrest after a police-used facial recongnition system mistook him for a different man. (Screen shot) When a police detective called his cellphone in January last year to advise Robert Williams turn himself in, he thought it was a prank. His wife’s call to the local police department confirmed they had no warrant for him. But when the 43-year-old, Farmington Hills, Mich., resident
Is police use of facial recognition technology an invasion of privacy? Dennis Romboy © Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News Then-U.S. Attorney for Utah Brett Tolman announces a grand jury indictment return charging Warren Jeffs with unlawful flight to avoid prosecution in 2007 in Salt Lake City. On Tuesday, Tolman told Congress there is a lack of transparency, accountability and information about police use of facial recognition technology.
Congress is wrestling with how to govern police use of facial recognition technology as software to scan databases or find people in crowds becomes more prevalent among federal, state and local law enforcement agencies across the country.