Chicago Robber Caught By Facial Recognition Sentenced To 22 Years
mpicpp (3454017) writes with this excerpt from Ars: "The first man to be arrested in Chicago based on facial recognition analysis was sentenced last week to 22 years in prison for armed robbery. ... In February 2013, Pierre Martin robbed a man at gunpoint while on a Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) train. After taking the man's phone, Martin jumped off the train. However, his image was captured by CTA surveillance cameras and was then compared to the Chicago Police Department's database of 4.5 million criminal booking images. Martin, who already had priors, had a mugshot in the database. He was later positively identified by witnesses. At trial, Martin also admitted to committing a similar robbery also on the Pink Line in January 2013—his face was captured during both robberies."
Shoulda just hacked the Chicago camera system with his phone.
This is nothing more than the type of fingerprint matching that's been going on for many decades. It just puts a name to a person after the fact. Now on the other hand, if he was actively recognized via facial recognition as he was out and about in public and then apprehended, well that would be a different story.
Better known as 318230.
Chicago Robber Identified By Facial Recognition Sentenced To 22 Years
Caught would imply that he was walking down the street and facial recognition directed authorities to him. That did not happen.
Have gnu, will travel.
"This is the guy our fingerprint comparison said did it, does he look like the guy?"
Any remotely competent lawyer would get that kind of identification thrown out of court. Any lineup, even a photo lineup, without multiple options is inadmissible in court.
No Dude, poor life choises put you behind bars, the best years of your life down the tubes for a smartphone. This is a perfect example of how stupid is a action verb, not a state of being.
Apocalypse Cancelled, Sorry, No Ticket Refunds
Sounds to me like this was used as an investigative lead that helped them find other evidence, rather than as the principal evidence presented in court. This really isn't different than a police officer viewing the recording to see the offender's face, then going through books of mugshots to find the face, then investigating those people that the officer thinks might be the offender. This is simply the computer taking the image that the police officer identified and searching those "books" for close matches, then the police looking at the MO of the crime as compared to the MO of the person previously arrested, and investigating ones that have the most commonality first.
In this case they identified a suspect, the suspect apparently had offended in this same way before, and the suspect was tried and convicted. This doesn't seem to violate any new privacy considerations- the recordings being collected themselves are nothing new, and the mugshot database isn't either. Simply making the comparison itself doesn't add any new fuel to the fire of personal liberty complaints or of violation of privacy.
Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
It's kind of like the T. S.A.: jillions spent to catch one guy every 3 years.
Table-ized A.I.
So why the heck can't they show his face in a story about facial recognition? Why the picture of a train? That has nothing to do with facial recognition! For all we know he has some incredibly unique face or maybe a tattoo across his forehead.
Mugshots of everyone so they don't have to wait for priors to be able to use this technology.
Oh, wait. They're already half-way there with state IDs.
Just saying.
All this will do is put stupid people in jail, while high-stealing bank execs walk the streets free.
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
Maybe he deserved this, sounds like it.
But it doesn't justify the mass surveillance being put in all over our public spaces. It can't even be justified on the cost, but far worse is the erosion of your freedom to go about your business without being tracked and monitored permanently. It might catch the odd transgressor, but that is not an acceptable enough reason to piss away all our privacy.
Oh but you have nothing to hide, so what? Well, it was Joseph Goebbels who first made that pithy remark about having nothing to fear, and look where that ended up - many perfectly innocent people had everything to fear.
The only reasonable response to mass CCTV is for everyone to wear a balaclava. Once the system is rendered useless, they might reconsider spending taxpayer's money on it. And it sends a strong message that we simply don't want to be tracked, even if we are not criminals.
They don't do that way, that is leading the witness. They include the person they've identified along with other people in a mug shot lineup and ask the witness to pick the person they saw. If the witness picks the same person that the police have already identified, then that is 2 pieces of evidence that they know who did it.
"Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
Crime is no longer a career choice. Crime has long been the employment of quite a few members of society but now they will be caught.
Imagine this scenario: I don't know if this person did it, but if the facial recognition software says it's true, it must be him. "Yes, officer, that's the guy."
I was responding to the OP who was implying that the officer would only show the witness one photo and stating that the facial recognition picked him.
Imagine this scenario: I don't know if this person did it, but if the facial recognition software says it's true, it must be him. "Yes, officer, that's the guy."
your question reminds me of the movie Brazil. How can someone have done something is the computer says they are dead?
Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
well under the GOP system better doctor then ER and you get stuff that the ER does not do.
What's the procedure about booking photos (and fingerprints taken at booking) in the US? Is it possible that your image could be on that database even if you were not convicted of a crime but just processed by the police even for something like being drunk one night and they brought you in to sober up?
That isn't how lineups are done in real life. Real police work bears no resemblance whatsoever to the routine felonies committed by character of cop shows.
Agreed. Which is why the grandparent seems off base with that comment. The police are not going to be feeding hints to a witness during a line up.
It's all irrelevant to this particular case anyway, and I think people are instantly imaginging worst case scenarios for facial recognition rather than reading the story.
Since when do eyewitnesses "positively" identify subjects?
Is it just me or does the sentence sound unusually extreme, I mean using a firearm in the robbery should probably add to the sentence in most countries, but 22 years for stealing a phone and perhaps something similar one other time seems disproportionate.
I very much doubt that the victim was even told that computer-driven facial recognition software played a role, and if the victim was told that, then I doubt that an individual suspect was identified by police without being part of a greater lineup.
Besides, based on the TV "police procedurals" that have been on for the last fifteen years, I expect that a statistically significant portion of the population already believe that this sort of facial recognition was already going on. Given that I remember actually seeing a demo of some real face recognition stuff in the late nineties I'm not even immune to that assumption. This is one place where those that have ended up on the list (ie, convicted felons) do not have a reasonable expectation of privacy, and mining that particular database for comparison is not an unreasonable intrusion, especially if the database is comprised of convicts. They didn't mine the drivers' license database, or the food handlers' database, or trades registration database, etc. They mined one that they have a legitimate case to go through.
Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
I finally got screwed by ebay/paypal this year. Bought some cables to connect up some solar panels and the seller gave a tracking number that said delivered, even though I was home all that day, have video of the package not being delivered, but too bad so sad you are SOL.
So I lost $130, but just imagine what happens when the software says you did it when you didn't.
Most criminals are black. That's more than just a coincidence.
Worldwide? I would guess that most criminals are Asian in "ethnicity".
The police are not going to be feeding hints to a witness during a line up.
Hahahahahahahahahahahahahah. Oh wait, were you serious?
At this point, why would anyone give any cop the benefit of the doubt about anything?
My problem with this would be if there were a blurry picture which then matched a few dozen people in the area. Then when the mugshots that all somewhat look like the guy are shown to the witnesses of course they are going to say, "Yup that looks like him."
Basically this system is going to be excellent at finding both the correct people and their doppelgängers. I certainly hope that in this case they were able to find some solid evidence.
But if they extended their database search a bit further into the Driver's licence photos, then it gets far more dangerous. Now they might find a few people who are a good match to their fuzzy photos and get warrants to kick down some doors.
So if I were a judge I would ask, "What else do you have?" after they showed me their sloppy detective work that hardly exceeded a google search in complexity.
This really isn't different than a police officer viewing the recording to see the offender's face, then going through books of mugshots to find the face, then investigating those people that the officer thinks might be the offender. This is simply the computer taking the image that the police officer identified and searching those "books" for close matches, then the police looking at the MO of the crime as compared to the MO of the person previously arrested, and investigating ones that have the most commonality first.
Well, since a lot of manual bars were and are lowered when we go from manual matching to computerized search you have to be a bit more careful with that argument. (It's close to being an antique if nothing else).
It's akin to the difference between going out fishing with a pole or two, to scouring the ocean with a fleet of trawlers. In essence it's the same activity, but the effects can be vastly different.
It's for example not at all improbable that the quality of match will decrease significantly when computers are involved for the single simple fact that a search doesn't "cost" nearly as much as with the manual system, and therefore it will be used much less judiciously. It goes from "Won't do that until there's a clear chance it will succeed", to "Well, it doesn't hurt to try." If people (e.g. courts) are still used to the evidentiary value of the old process, which wasn't typically used unless police thought it worthwhile, then the risk of falsely accusing someone just went up. (Perhaps even significantly). And that's just one risk off the top of my head.
So it's often not that computers allow a significantly different behaviour in theory (in fact we're crap at coming up with fundamentally new and exciting ways of using computers), we're masters at automating the old "manual" ways of doing things. It's that automating something tends to lead to difference use cases in practice, as it enables usage that would previously have been prohibitively expensive, and that we're usually crap at predicting what those effects would be.
(Compare mass surveillance. Hitler and East Germany did it, but they were about the only ones as the cost were staggering when all you had were manual methods of collection and analysis of the collecte data (the latter typically dominated cost). It was cost prohibitive for everybody but the most hard core of tyrants. Today the methods are so cheap that it happens almost by "accident" when it comes to the private sector, and even well run democracies fall into the "mass surveillance" trap, since it's it's so cheap and keeping it secret is much easier due to lower number of people who have to be involved. And the latter is one of those secondary effects that we're crap at foreseeing. It used to be that you couldn't keep that level of surveillance secret, there were just too many people involved. Everybody had to know they were oppressed, which meant that some organisations wouldn't dream of using it, lest they be tarred with that brush. Today it's relatively much easier and that's much of the outrage (what little there is, unfortunately), that people have come to the realisation that the US can, in a sence, be East Germany, without having to look like it. (Well, that likeness is of course not to be taken too far, obviously there are clear differences, but you get my drift.)
Stefan Axelsson
Facial recognition is known to produce false positives. Identification of suspects by witnesses is well known to be notoriously unreliable and easily influenced by the interrogator. All I can hope is that this method will not be used to convict without corroborating evidence.
Everything in the world is a double-edged sword. Another example is DNA evidence.
For over a century, fingerprints have been the gold standard by which suspects were positively identified. Today, the reliability and uniqueness of an individual's fingerprints has been called into question. The one saving grace when a positive match can be found is that it is very difficult to falsify fingerprints found on a weapon or at the scene of a crime.
Ah, but DNA is another matter altogether. We are being taught that individuals matched via DNA evidence leaves very little doubt, is it 1 in 7 Million, that the DNA found on the scene is that of the perpetrator. But what if the DNA is planted on the scene to frame an innocent patsy? Leaving a hair or blood sample is very easy to do. Couple that with the government and police compiling DNA databases of the citizenry and an entire new danger emerges.
Every time there is a political protest or, the Occupy Wall Street movement is a good example -- what was ubiquitous at all those sites? Cameras recording facial metrics of those involved. Now I suspect the US government has a massive database of photographs processed to extract the necessary metrics to identify other photographs of the same person. False positives could create mayhem in a system where too many are already falsely convicted of crimes.
No sir, I don't like it.
Did it occur to you that it's possible to forgive but to not forget? Recidivisim is a real problem, and one of the biggest indicators that one is going to break the law is that they already have a history of breaking the law. It would be stupid to not keep a functional, searchable list of those that have been convicted of a crime to compare against when crimes by persons unknown have been committed.
I'm all in favor giving people opportunity to change their behavior for the better, but I'm not going to ignore the distinct possibility that they won't use that opportunity in the way it is intended. And I do not feel that it is wrong for society to function in a similar way, epecially when transgressions that make victims out of people have occurred.
Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
I find it a bit appalling that this guy got 22 years for robbery. Had he killed the guy, he would have got only a little bit more time. This sentence is disproportionate and does not serve the public at all. Now the tax payers are forced to support this guy for the next 22 years at a ridiculous cost. When he gets out, they will likely have to support him some more given the lack of training in prison, and opportunities afterward. If this guy had kids, this sentence could potentially alter the children's lives toward a life of crime too (though that is speculation, but statistically supported). Why not put the guy in prison for a year, with intense training, followed by 5 year years of probation. After leaving prison, his record will be sealed, and if he is well behaved on his probation for 5 years, cleared. Something a bit innovative. No one is being served by this guy going to jail for 22 years for a simple armed robbery.
Shhh... Slashdot is not the place for common sense.
I would trust facial recognition over humans or a mugshot IF and ONLY IF the recognition algorithm was known and scrutinized/peer reviewed.
A human can make mistakes whereas a facial recognition system can accurately verify individual characteristics and ratios of a face (distance between eyes, ratio of nose distance to mouth etc..
When you have had the shit kicked out of you by multiple cops and then railroaded for offenses you did not commit then you might have the ability to contribute. Or are you an anonymous policeman?
The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.