AI facial recognition error leads Tennessee grandmother jailed for 60 days
A fifty-year-old woman from Tennessee spent nearly six months in jail after artificial intelligence software falsely linked her to a bank fraud investigation involving Fargo police. The initial arrest stemmed entirely from an AI facial recognition error that identified Angela Lipps as the perpetrator despite she had never visited North Dakota and was actually residing back home at the time of the alleged crime. Lawyers confirmed these charges were subsequently dismissed when independent verification revealed contradictory evidence proving her location, leaving Mrs.
Key Points
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1Angela Lipps, an innocent grandmother from Tennessee, was jailed for nearly six months due to false identification by AI facial recognition software.
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2The error linked her to bank fraud investigations in North Dakota (Fargo) despite she had never visited the state and records showed she lived only in Tennessee at that time. Charges were later dismissed based on this evidence of mistaken identity.
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3Lipps suffered severe collateral damage, including losing custody or control over a dog named Cosmaru as well as her home car due to legal proceedings stemming from AI error.
Developments
Angela Lipss spent six weeks and nights of her life after being misidentified by AI facial recognition as the main suspect in an organized bank fraud case involving North Dakota police officers who arrested at home on July 14. She was held without bail for nearly four months before learning she had never been to north-central Tennessee, where most people live their lives with no more than five years of travel experience and a life spent entirely within the state's borders.