Description: In 2019, facial recognition technology misidentified Francisco Arteaga as a suspect in an armed robbery in New Jersey. The incident led to nearly four years of pretrial incarceration. Despite having an alibi, Arteaga was charged based on the flawed identification. The legal battle that followed resulted in a court ruling requiring police to reveal details about the algorithms used in facial recognition. The process exposed significant gaps in transparency and accountability.
Editor Notes: See Incident 815 for a broader overview of these specific kinds of harms. Reconstructing the timeline of events: (1) November 29, 2019: An armed robbery occurs at the Buenavista Multiservices store in West New York, New Jersey. Police submit surveillance footage for facial recognition analysis. (2) December 2019: The West New York Police Department sends surveillance footage to the NYPD's Real Time Crime Center, which identifies Francisco Arteaga as a possible match using facial recognition technology. (3) 2019-2022: Arteaga spends nearly four years in pretrial detention while fighting the charges, despite having an alibi. (4) May 13, 2022: A trial judge denies Arteaga’s motion for discovery on details of the facial recognition technology used in his case. (5) June 7, 2023: A New Jersey appellate court rules that Arteaga is entitled to information on the facial recognition technology used in his case, including the algorithm, error rates, and other relevant details.
Entities
View all entitiesAlleged: Clearview AI developed an AI system deployed by West New York PD , NYPD and Real Time Crime Center, which harmed Francisco Arteaga.
Incident Stats
Incident ID
816
Report Count
1
Incident Date
2019-11-29
Editors
Daniel Atherton
Incident Reports
Reports Timeline
newjerseymonitor.com · 2024
- View the original report at its source
- View the report at the Internet Archive
Francisco Arteaga was incarcerated, waiting to appear for a court hearing last fall, when he spotted a huge guy eyeballing him from the other side of the courthouse holding cell.
“This guy’s arms are like this, right?” Arteaga said, tracing…
Variants
A "variant" is an incident that shares the same causative factors, produces similar harms, and involves the same intelligent systems as a known AI incident. Rather than index variants as entirely separate incidents, we list variations of incidents under the first similar incident submitted to the database. Unlike other submission types to the incident database, variants are not required to have reporting in evidence external to the Incident Database. Learn more from the research paper.