on air now
NOW PLAYING
Charl Leslie
up next
Up Next
Sam Ludidi
on air now
NOW PLAYING
Charl Leslie
up next
Up Next
Sam Ludidi
 

NYPD used Woody Harrelson pic to catch lookalike beer thief


NEW YORK (AP) — The New York Police Department used a photo of Woody Harrelson in its facial recognition program in an attempt to identify a beer thief who looked a lot like the actor, according to a report published this week.

The report says security footage of the thief was too pixelated and produced no matches while high-quality images of Harrelson, a three-time Oscar nominee, returned several possible matches and led to one arrest.

The NYPD also used a photo of a New York Knicks player to search its database for a man wanted for a Brooklyn assault, the report said.

"The stakes are too high in criminal investigations to rely on unreliable — or wrong — inputs," Georgetown researcher Clare Garvie wrote.

"It is one thing for a company to build a face recognition system designed to help individuals find their celebrity doppelgänger or painting lookalike for entertainment purposes. It's quite another to use these techniques to identify criminal suspects, who may be deprived of their liberty and ultimately prosecuted based on the match."

The NYPD said it has been deliberate and responsible in its use of facial recognition and that the technology is merely a means of producing leads, including in homicide, rape and robbery cases.

"No one has ever been arrested on the basis of a facial recognition match alone," Sgt. Jessica McRorie said in a statement. "As with any lead, further investigation is always needed to develop probable cause to arrest."

A message was left with a representative for Harrelson.

The Georgetown report says facial recognition has helped the NYPD crack about 2,900 cases in more than five years of using the technology.

McRorie says the department is constantly reassessing its procedures and is in the process of reviewing its existing facial recognition protocols.

"We compare images from crime scenes to arrest photos in law enforcement records," McRorie said. "We do not engage in mass or  random collection of facial records from NYPD camera systems, the internet, or social media."