Evansville police to add safeguards after officer's 'misuse' of AI software

Ryan Kushner, American City & County

June 19, 2024

2 Min Read
Evansville police to add safeguards after officer's 'misuse' of AI software

The Evansville Police Department in Evansville, Ind., announced it will be instituting additional safeguards surrounding its use of artificial intelligence software after one of its officers was found to be misusing the technology.

In a press conference held June 12, Evansville Chief of Police Phil Smith said that while the department was preparing to renew its contract with Clearview AI, an AI software that allows law enforcement to use facial recognition for investigations, they discovered an anomaly with one of its officer’s use of the tool. The audit, performed in March, found “a very high usage of the software by an officer whose work output was not indicative of the amount of inquiry searches that they had,” Smith said.

That officer was Michael Dockery, who, further investigation found, had used a case number associated with an actual incident to disguise his Clearview AI searches of people who had nothing to do with said incident, according to Smith. Those searches were conducted by Dockery between April 2023 and December 2023 and were a “misuse of technology,” according to the department.

Dockery, who had been with the department for five years, was placed on paid leave, followed by a 21-day unpaid suspension, and later resigned from his position.

Based on the nature of the searches with the AI software, most of them social media searches as opposed to the more typical CCTV image searches, Smith said it appeared Dockery was using the tool for “social purposes.”

“It’s not for personal use, and that’s what he did with it,” Smith said, adding that it was not a criminal matter, and that Dockery did not violate any Indiana statutes.

Part of the police department’s contract with Clearview AI already requires monitoring its own usage of the system, which the department had done, according to Smith. However, following the misuse, Smith said he plans to increase the department’s safeguards by instituting quarterly audits.

To read the complete article, visit American City & County.

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