AN exonerated man has filed a lawsuit against the city of Chicago for using ‘unreliable’ AI to falsely imprison him.

Michael Williams, 65, spent a year in jail after a controversial artificial intelligence (AI) program dubbed SpotShotter prompted his arrest, The Associated Press reports.

Chicago man says flaws with ShotSpotter technology had him framed for murder.

1

Chicago man says flaws with ShotSpotter technology had him framed for murder.Credit: CBS

What happened?

The Chicago man was investigated, arrested, and charged with killing a neighbor in 2020.

However, in 2021, a judge dismissed the murder case against him due to a lack of evidence – after he had already spent a year in jail.

Now, Williams along with a human rights advocacy group called The MacArthur Project have decided to take legal action.

Artificial Intelligence is getting ‘scary good’ - the things AI can beat humans at
Four AI myths debunked – experts reveal the truth about robots taking over

What is Williams claiming?

A lawsuit was filed in federal court on Thursday, July 21, 2022, and alleges that Williams was arrested based on no real evidence.

The suit also claims that Chicago police misused SpotShotter, which utilizes gunshot-location technology, calling it “unreliable”.

Because officers put “blind faith” in SpotShotter, which utilizes gunshot-location technology, they also ruled out potential suspects.

Most read in Tech

How could this happen?

Chicago prosecutors reportedly used audio picked up by ShotSpotter as critical evidence in charging Williams with murder.

ShotSpotter, however, is notorious for providing flimsy and even controversial evidence.

One 2021 report by the MacArthur Project found that 89 percent of ShotSpotter alerts lacked any on-site evidence, Futurism reports.

That same year, a Vice investigation claimed that the technology is racially biased, citing the death of 13-year-old Adam Toledo.

In March 2021, Toledo, an unarmed Black teenager, was shot by Chicago police after receiving a ShotSpotter alert.

What’s next?

The suit is asking for class-action status for any Chicago resident who was stopped on the basis of the alerts.

It’s also seeking a court order to barr the technology and its use by law enforcement in the city.

Britney had secret solo LA hotel stay despite claiming she was in London
Suspect trying to 'warn of alien & dragon battle got order from president'

“Even though now I’m so-called free, I don’t think I will ever be free of the thought of what they have done and the impact that has on me now, like the shaking with my hand,” Williams said.

“I constantly go back to the thought of being in that place. … I just can’t get my mind to settle down.”

This post first appeared on Thesun.co.uk

You May Also Like

Bill Gates on Covid: Most US Tests Are ‘Completely Garbage’

But people aren’t getting their tests back quickly enough. Well, that’s just…

Moon and Venus dazzle in conjunction in the night sky

Venus and the moon last night partnered up to dazzle stargazers around…

Pokémon Scarlet & Violet: The ten worst Generation nine Pokémon

OVER a hundred new Pokémon were introduced in Scarlet and Violet and…

Dangerous text that you should NEVER click sweeps America – and it’s got a very strange secret

A NEW text message scam has been targeting millions of Verizon users…