October 13, 2009 9:01 AM

FBI Scans DMV Photos for Criminals

(AP)  In its search for fugitives, the FBI has begun using facial-recognition technology on millions of motorists, comparing driver's license photos with pictures of convicts in a high-tech analysis of chin widths and nose sizes.

The project in North Carolina has already helped nab at least one suspect. Agents are eager to look for more criminals and possibly to expand the effort countrywide. But privacy advocates worry that the method allows authorities to track people who have done nothing wrong.

"Everybody's participating, essentially, in a virtual lineup by getting a driver's license," said Christopher Calabrese, an attorney who focuses on privacy issues at the American Civil Liberties Union.

Earlier this year, investigators learned that a double-homicide suspect named Rodolfo Corrales had moved to North Carolina. The FBI took a 1991 booking photo from California and compared it with 30 million photos stored by the motor vehicle agency in Raleigh.

In seconds, the search returned dozens of drivers who resembled Corrales, and an FBI analyst reviewed a gallery of images before zeroing in on a man who called himself Jose Solis.

A week later, after corroborating Corrales' identity, agents arrested him in High Point, southwest of Greensboro, where they believe he had built a new life under the assumed name. Corrales is scheduled for a preliminary hearing in Los Angeles later this month.

"Running facial recognition is not very labor-intensive at all," analyst Michael Garcia said. "If I can probe a hundred fugitives and get one or two, that's a home run."

Facial-recognition software is not entirely new, but the North Carolina project is the first major step for the FBI as it considers expanding use of the technology to find fugitives nationwide.

So-called biometric information that is unique to each person also includes fingerprints and DNA. More distant possibilities include iris patterns in the eye, voices, scent and even a person's gait.

FBI officials have organized a panel of authorities to study how best to increase use of the software. It will take at least a year to establish standards for license photos, and there's no timetable to roll out the program nationally.

Calabrese said Americans should be concerned about how their driver's licenses are being used.

Licenses "started as a permission to drive," he said. "Now you need them to open a bank account. You need them to be identified everywhere. And suddenly they're becoming the de facto law enforcement database."

State and federal laws allow driver's license agencies to release records for law enforcement, and local agencies have access to North Carolina's database, too. But the FBI is not authorized to collect and store the photos. That means the facial-recognition analysis must be done at the North Carolina Division of Motor Vehicles.

"Unless the person's a criminal, we would not have a need to have that information in the system," said Kim Del Greco, who oversees the FBI's biometrics division. "I think that would be a privacy concern. We're staying away from that."

Dan Roberts, assistant director of the FBI's Criminal Justice Information Services Division, added: "We're not interested in housing a bunch of photos of people who have done absolutely nothing wrong."

Gone are the days when states made drivers' licenses by snapping Polaroid photos and laminating them onto cards without recording copies.

Now states have quality photo machines and rules that prohibit drivers from smiling during the snapshot to improve the accuracy of computer comparisons.

North Carolina's lab scans an image and, within 10 seconds, compares the likeness with other photos based on an algorithm of factors such as the width of a chin or the structure of cheekbones. The search returns several hundred photos ranked by the similarities.

"We'll get some close hits, and we'll get some hits that are right on," said Stephen Lamm, who oversees the DMV lab.

The technology allowed the DMV to quickly highlight 28 different photos of one man who was apparently using many identities. It also identified one person who, as part of a sex change, came in with plucked eyebrows, long flowing hair and a new name - but the same radiant smile.

The system is not always right. Investigators used one DMV photo of an Associated Press reporter to search for a second DMV photo, but the system first returned dozens of other people, including a North Carolina terrorism suspect who had some similar facial features.

The images from the reporter and terror suspect scored a likeness of 72 percent, below the mid-80s that officials consider a solid hit.

Facial-recognition experts believe the technology has improved drastically since 2002, when extremely high failure rates led authorities to scrap a program planned for the entrances to the Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City.

Lamm said investigators reviewing the galleries can almost always find the right photo, using a combination of the computer and the naked eye.

Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, questioned whether the facial-recognition systems that were pushed after the Sept. 11 attacks are accurate or even worthwhile.

"We don't have good photos of terrorists," Rotenberg said. "Most of the facial-recognition systems today are built on state DMV records because that's where the good photos are. It's not where the terrorists are."

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 13 Comments
by berto070809 October 14, 2009 7:22 PM EDT
hello well i writting you if you can email me back at berto070809@yahoo.com i would like to no if you could possible look for this guy named marwan saeed he has been gone for almost two years he is wanted for first degree murder out of richmond texas fortbend county so if you can please get back with me as soon as you can thank you very much.

Thanks, Berto
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by wyodutch October 13, 2009 6:39 PM EDT
Everytime the government drags out another gadget like this to "Keep America safe"... The question we ought to ask is "Would this technology have helped Hitler?" If the answer is 'Yes'. Then we ought not allow the government to have it.
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by wyodutch October 13, 2009 6:43 PM EDT
Unless of course.. you proponents of technology like this can give us an example of tyranny where a government wasn't involved.
by Mokkie57 October 13, 2009 1:47 PM EDT
The government is pushing the mark of the Beast on people. And the people do not even realize it.

Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary Safety deserve neither Liberty nor Safety -Ben Franklin
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by Marc_1986 October 13, 2009 2:31 PM EDT
@mokkie

I'm sick of these 250+ year old quotes... They barely had electricity back then, let alone computers and the DMV!
by endurorob_5 October 13, 2009 1:17 PM EDT
Ms_enza October 13, 2009 12:54 PM EDT
Unless of course, some photo taken from a secruity camera at a crime scene just sort of looks like my driver's license photo...

How would you feel about checkpoints where you are asked for "your papers, please".

This is just the electronic version.



Noone is going to bother you if your photo sort of looks like one taken from a crime scene. They said they consider a hit to be an 80% match. Then people actually look at it to make a comparison. Don't be so paranoid. By the way that check point you are talking about is the border, the airport......
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by skepticalJM October 13, 2009 11:00 AM EDT
Your image and all your personal data belong to you; no one should use it without direct permission from the owner. Think of it as copyrightable material. You lawyers out their should be presenting cases to reimburse the owners on the basis of copyright infringement! This would send a deadly dagger at the capitalistic parasites who even steal the identities of others to be used to glut themselves. We have to preserve our personal lives and the information we create, and keep it private and personal.
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by jsilver2th October 13, 2009 10:41 AM EDT
Now where is everybody yelling about how terrible it is to give illegal aliens driver's licenses?

During that debate I was trying to explain how giving them driver's licenses could only help law enforcement in the long run- I've seen many people get snagged by the paper trail created by their driver's license- get their data, they are going to drive anyway- enough said-
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by endurorob_5 October 13, 2009 1:10 PM EDT
They don't need drivers licenses they need to be deported.
by jwesel1 October 13, 2009 10:03 AM EDT
Gone are the good old days when no two government agencies could share data without a court order.
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by endurorob_5 October 13, 2009 1:10 PM EDT
Yeah, I think that led to the terroist atacks on 9/11. The good old days.
by barbaram99 October 13, 2009 9:46 AM EDT
What next..The nanny govt..
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by John_Merritt October 13, 2009 9:37 AM EDT
I like the facial recognition technology that is unless you have a few people who might look like me. The eye-retinal scan techniques raises some questions in my mind. I have stigmatism in one eye greater than the other. In the aging process we get floaters and/or small cataract formations and that might cause some problems I feel. Is the new technologies going to be able to address these areas and/or will patients that have eye problems have to 'printed' more frequently than others? Interesting article.
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