Booker, Cotton Acknowledge Benefits of AI in Police Probes
AI is valuable for police investigations but carries civil liberty and privacy risks, Senate Criminal Justice Subcommittee Chairman Cory Booker, D-N.J., and ranking member Tom Cotton, R-Ark., agreed Wednesday. The subcommittee discussed AI as a tool in investigations and prosecutions…
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during a hearing. Booker and Cotton didn’t announce legislation on the topic. Instead, they discussed AI's benefits generally, including in facial recognition tools, license plate scanners, gunshot identification and financial crimes tools. Booker admitted he doesn’t always agree with Cotton but said the ranking member is “intellectually honest.” Booker raised concerns about the increased prevalence of surveillance technology in minority communities, saying people living in those areas are more likely to encounter video surveillance and physical stops. He asked whether police can empathize with those concerns. However, Miami Assistant Police Chief Armando Aguilar said video surveillance is “an accepted part of life for all communities throughout” the country. Aguilar claimed the U.S. is second to China in the number of video cameras the average citizen encounters daily, and “most cameras” are owned by private individuals, not government. AI technology is crucial to police departments, and many crimes would go unsolved without it, he said. Cotton said AI technology has helped lead to a faster, more efficient and accurate criminal justice system. Cotton highlighted the benefits of AI technology in child sexual abuse cases, noting how facial recognition helps identify predators.