Friend,
Porcha Woodruff was 8 months pregnant and getting her daughters ready for school when police officers arrested her at her home and detained her for 11 hours, where she was traumatized, dehydrated, and in pain. This horrific story marks the third wrongful arrest in my hometown of Detroit based on facial recognition falsely identifying our residents, making them suspects in crimes they did not commit. This technology is making us less safe, and its racist inaccuracies disproportionately harm Black and brown communities that are already at risk for over-criminalization. I’m co-leading the Facial Recognition and Biometric Technology Moratorium Act that would :
Research shows that nearly half of U.S. adults’ faces exist in facial recognition databases, and the faces of Black, brown, and Asian people are up to 100 times more likely to be misidentified than white male faces. For years I’ve called for a ban on this racist technology, which is being used in neighborhoods across the country to invade privacy, surveil, and criminalize. It’s a flawed and unconstitutional system that endangers our lives and our freedoms. I’ve met with local community advocates and lifted up their demands to end the Detroit Police Department’s use of the dangerous technology. Inspired by tenants’ rights activists, I also co-introduced a bill to prohibit the technology’s use in public housing that gets HUD funding. This year, my colleagues and I re-introduced the Facial Recognition and Biometric Technology Moratorium Act. With more false arrests occurring around the country, we must urgently pass this bill and protect our communities. Thank you for taking action. In solidarity,
Rashida. |
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Rashida Tlaib for Congress PO Box 32777 Detroit, MI 48232 |
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