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The Oklahoma City Police Department recently entered into a contract with an AI company to use its facial comparison software.
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Last week, the Oklahoma City Council approved the police department’s request to purchase AI facial comparison technology. The company providing the technology has been involved in a nationwide class-action lawsuit over biometric privacy.
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The council voted 7-2 to authorize law firm Collins, Zorn, and Wagner’s representation of former OKCPD officer Joseph Gibson, who threw a 71-year-old man named Lich Vu to the ground during a traffic stop in October of last year.
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Charges against an Oklahoma City police officer who hospitalized an elderly Vietnamese man were dismissed late last year. The officer has now resigned, according to a OKCPD spokesperson.
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The Oklahoma City Council approved more than $227 million for the city’s police budget on Tuesday. The total is a $1.3 million increase over the last…
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Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Abby Broyles was struck in her car during a hit-and-run accident Sunday night in Oklahoma City. Broyles, who is…
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Oklahoma City police estimated at least 3,000 protesters rallied to a demonstration organized Sunday by the Oklahoma City chapter of Black Lives Matter.…
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Oklahoma City Police could face legal action in retaliation for the March shooting of a 14-year-old black boy.Police claim Lorenzo Clerkley did not follow…
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John Whitfield was just a mile or two away from his home in northeast Oklahoma City when he noticed police lights in his rear-view mirror during a spring…
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Oklahoma law enforcement agencies were among hundreds who participated in a nationwide investigation into underage human trafficking. The Federal Bureau…