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Black man wrongfully arrested after facial recognition misidentification in NYPD exposure case, leading to two-day jail stint and case dismissal

Feb 1, 2025Manhattan, USA4 sources

Summary

The New York Police Department (NYPD) faced scrutiny after facial recognition technology falsely matched Trevis Williams, a Black man, to a suspect in a February 2023 exposure case in Manhattan. Williams, who was 6 feet 2 inches and 230 pounds, was arrested in April despite being significantly taller and heavier than the reported suspect. He was wrongfully jailed for two days before the case was dropped in July 2023. Civil rights groups and legal representatives accused the NYPD of bypassing legal restrictions by using facial recognition data from unauthorized sources and other city agencies. The Legal Aid Society, representing Williams, criticized the NYPD for disregarding protocols that prevent false arrests. In January 2024, Democratic senators warned the U.S. Department of Justice about the risks of facial recognition technology, citing its disproportionate impact on Black communities and urging reconsideration of funding for such tools.

Incident Details

Domain
Algorithmic Discrimination

Automated systems that produce discriminatory outcomes based on protected characteristics.

Harm Types
Wrongful Arrest
Discrimination

Differential treatment or outcomes based on protected characteristics.

Mechanism
conduct
Platforms
facial recognition program
Companies
New York Police Department (NYPD)Legal Aid Society
Recipient
IndividualTrevis Williams
Dimensions
discriminatoryautonomyphysicalpsychological

Who Was Affected

Age
Adult
Gender
Male
Group
Racial/Ethnic Minority