Say, You look Familiar?
Wednesday, 17-Jan-01 09:34:03

    63.10.97.32 writes:

    Be sure to see the reference to New Jersey and Louisianna doing the same
    thing. Coming to your neighborhood and ITS smart highways SOON!
    joe 6pk Amer I CAN

    http://www.sightings.com/general7/scann.htm
    Computers Now Scanning 24
    Hr Videos From Known
    Criminal Faces
    By Joan Walters
    TorStar News Service
    1-16-01



    HAMILTON - Police are secretly scanning the faces of customers at all
    Ontario casinos to compare with criminal mug shots in a special police data
    base.


    Ontario's privacy commission said yesterday it knew nothing about the
    practice but would investigate.

    According to an investigation by the Hamilton Spectator, the Ontario
    government bought the face-recognition system so Ontario Provincial Police
    gaming enforcement teams can find criminals more easily inside casinos.

    The system lets police compare images from live video surveillance inside
    the casino to a data base of mug shots, looking for matches.

    The surveillance runs 24 hours a day at all of Ontario's commercial and
    charity casinos.

    That means patrons of Casino Niagara, Casino Rama and Casino Windsor, and
    five charity casinos in cities such as Brantford, are subject to possible
    face-recognition scanning by police.

    According to the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation figures for last
    year's July-September quarter, an average of 19,638 people a day visited
    Casino Windsor, with 3,406,535 patrons over a 12-month period.

    `Certainly in casinos, it's well-known to the population that they're
    subject to video monitoring upon entry. There's no reasonable expectation of
    privacy in any way.' - Detective Superintendent Ken Smith


    Casino Rama had a daily average of 16,073 patrons with 2,664,180 visiting a
    year. A daily average of 29,043 people visited Casino Niagara, a total of
    4,795,000 in the last year.


    Police say they do not need special authority to operate the surveillance
    system because there is ``no expectation of privacy'' at a casino, said
    Detective Superintendent Ken Smith of the Ontario Provincial Police.

    ``Certainly in casinos, it's well-known to the population that they're
    subject to video monitoring upon entry,'' Smith said.

    ``There's no reasonable expectation of privacy in any way.''

    Many U.S. casinos and a few in Canada use privately assembled photo
    databases and face recognition to monitor customers.

    But this is thought to be the first time in Canada that police have used a
    system on casino premises to find ``hits'' in their own criminal files.

    The OPP say they have assembled the database themselves and are only looking
    for people convicted of gaming offences under the Criminal Code. Such
    individuals can't enter casinos due to court order or probation.

    Smith said the Ontario police casino system is not connected to any of
    Canada's live criminal databases, such as CPIC.

    Police could therefore not scan a customer's face against pictures of
    suspects in other crimes, he said.

    But the system is linked to a commercial casino network carrying mug shots
    of cheats, rowdies and other undesirables.

    About 120 North American casinos are online.

    Police would not discuss that aspect of surveillance, but said all work is
    ``part of maintaining the integrity of the Ontario gaming industry.''

    Smith said face-recognition is only an investigative tool and is ``not
    intended to be proof of identity beyond a reasonable doubt.''

    Enforcement team members would approach the person or use other techniques
    when they get a database hit.

    The OPP enforcement officers are attached to the Alcohol and Gaming
    Commission of Ontario, which oversees casinos.

    Neither the commission nor the office of Consumer Minister Bob Runciman
    would comment yesterday.

    Runciman's ministry, which is responsible for gaming, made the equipment
    purchase last year.

    The company which supplied the equipment said face-recognition is used
    widely in the industry.

    But he said only New Jersey and Louisiana have given it to police.

    Casinos use most of the systems themselves.

    ``If you think somebody you don't want is on your premises you take one of
    your cameras, point it at the person, run the database and see if any
    matches come up,'' says Mike O'Dea.

    O'Dea is the vice-president of Biometrica Systems Inc. of Mt. Vernon, New
    Hampshire, and Las Vegas.

    ``It uses state of the art technology to identify and compare facial
    configurations, based on a mathematical mapping of the contours of the
    face,'' said Smith, of the OPP.

    ``It's not intrusive, it's not like fingerprints, but people are very
    identifiable using this technology.''

    Biometrics have become an issue in recent weeks because the Ontario
    government is considering the technology for its smart card program.

    ``We had not heard anything about the police using this,'' said Bob Spence,
    a member of Ontario Privacy Commissioner Ann Couvakian's staff.

    ``We're going to ask questions.''

    He said it was not clear whether the Ontario law governing the collection
    and control of information by a government organization even covered the
    situation.


    HAMILTON SPECTATOR With files from Amanda Graham

    joe 6pk

Say, You look Familiar? (joe 6pk) (17-Jan-01 09:34:03)

 

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