Cop’s Family Sent Me Hatemail, So I Got the Video Exposing What He Did Posted on May 1, 2025 Monongalia County Sheriff’s Deputy Lance Kuretza was indicted by the Feds as a result of this never-before-seen bodycam footage showing him suddenly confronting and arresting an innocent man, who was sleeping in a hotel room. I tried to get the footage over two years ago. Since then, he was acquitted by a federal jury in his criminal prosecution. Now he’s back to work as a deputy. But should he have a badge in light of this footage, showing what really happened that night?
Motorcyclist Gets Choked (to De@th) at Traffic Stop, Cops Pretend He OD’d | Busted by Bodycam Posted on May 6, 2025 Deputies in Ashe County, North Carolina stopped motorcyclist Stuart Mast over an alleged traffic violation in September of 2024. Within seconds of being pulled over, his life would be over. The local sheriff put out a statement to the public and the media that, as it turns out, is completely contradicted by the bodycam footage, which was just released. https://thecivilrightslawyer.com/20...c-stop-cops-pretend-he-odd-busted-by-bodycam/
Cops Arrest Paraplegic in Wheelchair for “Kicking Down” Woman’s Door and Fleeing “On Foot” Posted on May 12, 2025 In June of 2024, a woman called police and claimed Charles Read kicked down her door and assaulted her, then fled on foot. Officer Mark Bellotte obtained an arrest warrant for Mr. Read. The only problem was… Mr. Read has been in a wheelchair for 25 years.
https://slguardian.org/police-across-u-s-quietly-adopt-new-ai-surveillance/amp/ Police Across U.S. Quietly Adopt New AI Surveillance As local and federal authorities across the U.S. face growing restrictions on facial recognition technology, many are turning to a controversial new AI tool that skirts legal limits by tracking people using non-biometric attributes instead. The technology, known as Track, was developed by video analytics firm Veritone and is already in use by more than 400 agencies and institutions—including local police departments, federal prosecutors, and universities. According to a recent report by MIT Technology Review, which first brought the tool to public attention, Track allows law enforcement to monitor individuals based on observable traits such as body size, clothing, hairstyle, gender, and accessories. The system does not rely on facial features, allowing it to operate in jurisdictions where facial recognition technology is restricted or banned. Ryan Steelberg, CEO of Veritone, told MIT Technology Review that Track was designed specifically to help authorities “potentially identify criminals” when facial recognition is not permitted or faces are obscured. The software analyzes recorded video and can compile timelines showing a person’s movements across multiple locations and video sources—from body cameras and drones to public footage and citizen uploads from platforms like Ring or YouTube. Steelberg described the product as the company’s “Jason Bourne app,” capable of constructing complete surveillance narratives without needing a clear view of a subject’s face. Track’s ability to bypass facial recognition laws by avoiding biometric data has raised significant concerns among civil liberties advocates. While biometric data—such as fingerprints and facial features—is specifically regulated under many state and local laws, attributes like clothing or body shape often fall outside the legal definitions, despite their ability to persistently identify individuals over time. “This is a potentially authoritarian technology,” said Jay Stanley, a senior policy analyst at the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), in an interview with MIT Technology Review. “It gives great powers to the police and the government that will make it easier for them to solve crimes—but also easier to overuse and potentially abuse.” The ACLU expressed alarm that Track represents the first known use of a non-biometric surveillance system deployed at scale in the United States. The organization also warned that it could normalize mass surveillance under the guise of technological workaround. While Veritone says only 6% of its business currently comes from the public sector, that segment is its fastest-growing market. Track is already being used in states such as California, Washington, Colorado, New Jersey, and Illinois. At the federal level, the Department of Justice began using the tool in criminal investigations as early as August 2023. Veritone also says its broader suite of AI surveillance tools—including facial recognition—is in use at the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Defense. Veritone did not specify which divisions within these federal agencies use Track, and neither the Department of Justice, Homeland Security, nor Defense responded to MIT Technology Review’s requests for comment. Critics argue that Track significantly expands the scope of video footage that can be used in investigations. Unlike facial recognition, which requires visible, unobstructed faces, Track can analyze video where such detail is unavailable. This means vast archives of video—previously of little forensic value—could now be mined for investigative leads. “This creates a categorically new scale and nature of privacy invasion,” said Nathan Wessler, an ACLU attorney. “You’re not just speeding up what a cop could already do—you’re creating a capability no human investigator ever had.” The emergence of tools like Track coincides with the proliferation of laws limiting or banning facial recognition across the U.S. Cities like San Francisco and Oakland have nearly total bans, while states such as Montana and Maine sharply limit its use, especially with live surveillance feeds. However, many of these laws focus specifically on “biometric” data, leaving room for tools like Track to operate in a legal gray zone. Even so, experts warn that attributes such as body type or recurring clothing items can function as de facto biometric identifiers over time. Steelberg told MIT Technology Review that Track may soon be able to process live video feeds, a development that would further blur the lines between passive analysis and active surveillance. He also acknowledged that video evidence from Track is already being used in multiple ongoing legal cases, although he declined to provide specifics. Despite Veritone’s insistence that Track is merely a “culling tool” to help investigators locate relevant footage more efficiently, privacy advocates see a troubling trend. “Even if it’s not facial recognition, it can achieve many of the same ends—and it’s happening without the same level of oversight,” said Stanley of the ACLU. As this technology spreads, civil liberties groups are calling for new regulations to ensure that non-biometric AI surveillance tools like Track are subject to the same scrutiny as their biometric counterparts.
It's already been used to find and convict completely innocent people. Veritone gave us a demonstration of Track in which it analyzed people... from the January 6 riots https://www.technologyreview.com/20...helping-police-skirt-facial-recognition-bans/
In Bowling Green, Kentucky, a man and his girlfriend were trying to have a yard sale when police officers from the Warren County Sheriff's Office and the Bowling Green Police Department appeared and accused them of shoplifting, due to there being multiple duplicate items for sale on the tables in the front yard. Despite not having a warrant, the officers refused to leave, detaining a man and attempting to interrogate him on the home's front porch for over 45 minutes.
This gives me PTSD, because it's so similar to my situation. We both offered kindness to people. In both cases we were thanked for our kindness. In both cases the accusers were fine and joking with people immediately after the event. In both cases the authorities had clear evidence of that and still pressed charges that were wildly out of line with even disorderly conduct. The other thing that bugs me about this is that I live in a small community. Anytime someone sees a car/van/truck they don't immediately recognize drive through a town of 250 people, 200 of them are on Facebook posting to watch out for abductors and human traffickers and no one's ever been abducted in this area and none of these situations ever lead to abduction or something criminal. But I swear next week I'll see someone overreact like that again next week. It's like Pizzagate. Everyone thinks everyone else is doing terrible things they watch on Lifetime movies.
People like this are why people question allegations when there is no physical evidence (probably most notably rape allegations). It's better to allow a guilty person to go free than have the justice department ruin an innocent person's life. And I prefer law that errs on that side of caution. I'm sorry you've had any false allegations against you (I know they were far less than rape allegations, but it's a terrible betrayal all the same). I hope things are getting better.
Thank you. Obviously, there's so much wrong with stuff like this. I'm still limited in being able to get a job in my field and even to travel just because of the allegations, most of which were eventually removed completely or substantially downgraded. The initial reports still are out there. The DA's office had all of the evidence, knew there wasn't any reason to charge me with anything, and still went ahead with it. And, of course, they work in the same building with the accusers, as does the judge, and their code of ethics says none of them should have been doing anything with the case. Then I've been getting harassed at my home or on line by the accusers and their families. There are a lot of things I still have to look into. The big thing is that you're right. When this kind of thing happens, it casts doubt on when women really are sexually assaulted, stalked or harassed, because you have someone pressing charges for being given a card that says "I'm sorry about your aunt. She was a nice person and your family was lucky to have her in their lives," and, because she works in the courthouse, she can use her position to influence her colleagues and try to ruin someone's life. People hear about that, and then they wonder when someone else makes an accusation if it's real or if it's just someone holding a grudge or just wanting to be mean to someone.
Thanks for the update. I'm very sorry it's still causing you problems. Hang in there. I'm sure things will improve soon.
Cop Yanks Autistic Kid Out of His Home, Onto the Ground, Arresting Him Posted on May 30, 2025 In Milton, Florida, Deputy Zachary MacPherson observed 20 year old Aleczander “Zander” Cash, who is autistic, walking across his residential street and into his home. Becoming angry that he couldn’t hear him (due to his wearing headphones), MacPherson banged on the front door, and when Cash answered, yanked Cash out of the front door of his home and onto the ground, handcuffing and arresting him. Not only was no crime committed by Cash, but Deputy MacPherson admittedly did not have a warrant.