Murder suspect nabbed with facial recognition
China Daily | Updated: 2019-08-10 08:43
CHONGQING - With the help of facial recognition technology, police in southwest China's Chongqing municipality have caught a murder suspect who has been on the run for 17 years, local authorities said on Friday.
On July 31, a police officer from Chongqing's Jiulongpo district received an alert from a facial recognition system installed at a local square. The system reported there was a high likelihood that the man captured by the cameras was the suspect of a robbery and murder case in 2002.
The system used by the police can compare images of people on the streets with suspects in the police database and immediately notify police once a match rate crosses a set threshold.
"It was hard to tell whether the man was the suspect because he had been on the run for 17 years and his appearance had changed," said the officer, Qiu Rui. "But I believed then that the facial recognition system is usually more reliable than human eyes, as it makes conclusions according to a person's facial details such as eye and face shapes."
A police investigation found the man had made frequent phone calls to the suspect's sister. On Aug 2, the police captured the man, who admitted on the spot that he was the suspect.
Local police said the suspect, surnamed Dong, along with three other people, robbed and killed a person on July 1, 2002. While Dong's accomplices were arrested soon afterward, Dong went on the run.
In recent years, monitoring cameras with facial recognition technology have increasingly become the method of choice used by the Chongqing police to deter and solve crimes.
In Jiulongpo district alone, facial recognition systems have helped local police crack more than 200 cases involving fugitives or missing persons and identified over 1,000 traffic violations this year.
Xinhua