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Computerized ‘Mr. Potato Head’ system aids police

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CIOL Bureau
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Elinor Mills Abreu

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SAN FRANCISCO: In Arizona and Los Angeles, police are replacing law

enforcement mainstays such as mugshots and lineups of suspects with technology

some call Mr. Potato Head.

The photographic database and facial recognition systems, called Crime

Capture and CrimeWeb, allow investigators to pick different types of facial

features to search databases for criminals. It's not unlike the toy famous for

allowing kids to change body parts on a potato, police said.

"We've named it Mr. Potato Head in Arizona," said Cyndy Pellien,

administrative services officer for the Arizona Department of Public Safety.

"You can pick different types of eyes and hair," or even search for a

specific tattoo, she said. "If there is a missing child, we have the

ability to scan their school photo in the system and do flyers to notify people

statewide immediately."

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The software from ImageWare Systems Inc. replaces the paper records that can

often take days or weeks to find or send to other agencies. Officials around the

United States are using the system to take digital photos of faces, tattoos,

scars and other identifying features of people arrested.

The photos, combined with fingerprints, names and other personal information,

are aggregated into a database that can be accessed by other law enforcers.

"Before, if you were booked, your picture was taken on real film. Then

it was sent to a lab and developed," said Sgt. Larry Bryant of the LA

County Sheriff Department's records and identification bureau, where officials

arrest about 30,000 people a month.

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"The police agency right next door never knew that a booking photo

existed," he said. "They would have to send a letter to the crime lab

requesting a copy, and that could take a week to two weeks to process."

The database is easily searchable, allowing officials to quickly find faces

that are similar to a witness' description. For example, officials in Los

Angeles county can use a composite sketch to search on its database of 1.5

million faces and get a list of faces that most closely match, Bryant said.

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Mr. Potato car



The system also can help identify cars, allowing officials to search on
different makes, models and types and even add dents and pin stripes, said Jim

Miller, chief executive of ImageWare Systems, based in San Diego.

ImageWare's technology is also accessible by mobile devices. Los Angeles

county is testing the system on iPac handheld computers, said Bryant.

Critics of facial recognition software, increasingly touted by law enforcers

since the attacks of Sept. 11, say the technology is unreliable and violates

individual privacy rights when used to grab images of unsuspecting people in

crowds.

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"People shouldn't be held as a suspect just because a technology holds

them to be that way," said Mihir Kshirsagar, a policy fellow at the New

York-based Electronic Privacy Information Center. Miller said the technology is

not relied on as the sole source of identification, and the central repository

at ImageWare is not connected with any outside databases. "It's not a guilt

or innocence tool," he said.

In the United States, about 900 police departments, including in New York and

Los Angeles, and federal agencies such as the FBI use ImageWare technology,

according to Miller.

In Las Vegas, officials use the system to automate background checks for

250,000 casino workers, while the state of New South Wales, Australia, including

the state capital Sydney, and the country of Costa Rica are also deploying it,

he said.

(C) Reuters Limited.

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