This could have been avoided if they just RTFM! (Read the friendly manual)
Cleveland police used AI to justify a search warrant. It has derailed a murder case
A jury may never see the gun that authorities say was used to kill Blake Story last year.
That’s because Cleveland police used a facial recognition program – one that explicitly says its results are not admissible in court – to obtain a search warrant, according to court documents.
The search turned up what police say is the murder weapon in the suspect’s home. But a Cuyahoga County judge tossed that evidence after siding with defense attorneys who argued that the search warrant affidavit was misleading and relied on inadmissible evidence.
(Related)
Virginia legislation calls for human oversight of AI use in court decisions
Virginia lawmakers want to regulate the use of artificial intelligence-based tools in the criminal justice system.
During this year’s General Assembly session, Del. Cliff Hayes Jr. (D–Chesapeake) introduced a bill that would reinforce human oversight in the criminal justice system while allowing AI to play a supporting role.
Hayes’ bill would prohibit AI-generated recommendations from being used as the sole basis for key decisions related to pre-trial detention or release, prosecution, adjudication, sentencing, probation, parole, correctional supervision, or rehabilitation. It would also make any use of AI in those decisions subject to legal challenge or objection.
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