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Leigh On Sea News. Live Facial Recognition - POLICE will be using Live Facial Recognition (LFR) technology in Southend City for the first time on Tuesday October 24, focussing tackling high harm offences.

Leigh On Sea News. Live Facial Recognition – POLICE will be using Live Facial Recognition (LFR) technology in Southend City for the first time on Tuesday October 24, focussing tackling high harm offences.

Live Facial Recognition - POLICE will be using Live Facial Recognition (LFR) technology in Southend City for the first time on Tuesday October 24, focussing tackling high harm offences.

POLICE will be using Live Facial Recognition (LFR) technology in Southend City for the first time on Tuesday October 24, focussing on tackling high harm offences.

Ahead of the targeted action a senior detective said: “We’re committed to tackling those who pose the greatest risk to our communities.”

A spokesperson added: “Work by our officers to tackle violent, sexual, and domestic offences has seen reports of these incidents fall over the past 12 months, while knife-enabled crime is also down.

“Positive, proactive work has also seen the number of possession of weapons and drug trafficking offences increase – a sign that our officers are having more success.

“As part of our continued work to tackle high harm offences, we will be carrying out activity targeting offenders next week.

“There will be specific activity in Southend on sea on Tuesday 24 October and Chelmsford on Wednesday 25 October, involving the use of Live Facial Recognition (LFR) technology.

“It will be the first time this technology has been used in Essex.”

Detective Superintendent Stephen Jennings said: “We’re committed to tackling those who pose the greatest risk to our communities and we’re utilising innovative technology to do this.

“This will help us keep the public safe and get justice for victims.

“Live Facial Recognition technology is targeted to focus on people wanted in connection with specific offences.

“The technology compares live camera feeds of faces against a predetermined database or ‘watch list’ of people of interest.

“Only images of specific people wanted in connection with high harm and/or violent crimes appear on that database.

“When there’s a positive match, appropriate action will be taken by officers on the ground.

“If you’re not on the ‘watch list’, your face cannot be matched.”

Det Supt Jennings added: “We take your privacy very seriously and images of members of the public will not be stored.

“If you walk through an area where LFR is being deployed and you are not one of the specific people we’re trying to locate, your image will be immediately and automatically deleted.

“It will not be held on a database, it will not be remembered, and it will not be kept.

“South Wales Police are providing the technology for this deployment and there has not been one single wrongful arrest because of their use of facial recognition.”

For more information about Live Facial Recognition Technology, please visit: essex.police.uk/police-forces/essex-police/areas/essex-police/au/about-us/live-facial-recognition.

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