FBI Turns Drivers' License Pictures into Criminal Line-Up

According to USA Today, the new system was used earlier this year to track down a man named Rodolfo Corrales, who had been suspected of double homicide in California. Authorities learned that he had fled to North Carolina, so they took photos of him, dating from 1991, to Raleigh, N.C. There, software was used to analyze various facial features (such as chin and nose width) and sort through the state's 30 million license photos. The search turned up dozens of images resembling those of Corrales. Analysts reviewed the results, finding a man who was calling himself Jose Solis. Eventually, he was positively identified as Corrales and arrested.
The FBI is considering plans to take the system nationwide, but predictably (and understandably) this has raised flags for privacy advocates like Christopher Calabrese of the ACLU. Authorities are sensitive to these concerns, and although they haven't tabled wider use of facial recognition, they have not announced any timetable for implementation. Interestingly, drivers' license photos would not be transferred to federal systems. Instead, the FBI would have to go to individual states, and on a case by case basis, in order to gain access to the databases.
States' rights notwithstanding, we're not terribly comfortable with our pictures going into a line-up just because we sit behind a steering wheel. [From: USA Today]



Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
blablabla said 9:57PM on 10-14-2009
Maybe you're wondering about the 20million illegals...with no picture IDs..??? Your POS prezidunce plans to give them amnesty...in exchange for their votes of course...
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Millerson said 2:21AM on 10-15-2009
Think this is a good idea? Wait until the police show up at your door because your driver's license photo happened to resemble a wanted fugitive, and YOU have to pay the legal costs to HOPE you can prove that you are innocent. The jails are already filled with thousands of people who were railroaded into convictions, and this new system will increase that number by leaps and bounds. Another goose step forward in Nazi America, where "it is better to execute a hundred innocent people than let one guilty person escape."
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