At the suggestion of the Open Rights Group, I've written to my local council about police use of face recognition technology.
"I am writing to urge you to to ban police use of live facial recognition technology in Abingdon East.
These surveillance tools are being deployed by police without public consent, or clear legal grounds, undermining the right to privacy, the right to be presumed innocent and making police misuse of the technology more likely.
These tools do not predict crime – they predict policing. Built on flawed, discriminatory data, they disproportionately target Black and racialised communities, low-income areas, and migrants. Rather than making our communites safer, these technologies reinforce racism and criminalise poverty.
“Predictive policing” strips away our fundamental right to be presumed innocent. It creates fear, not safety. The European Union has already recognised these harms and taken action to ban such technologies. The UK must do the same.
It is well documented that when police are given new tools, it is Black and racialised communities that bear the brunt of the harm, with consequences including increased police harassment, injury from use of force and unjust stop and search. I am deeply concerned for the safety of my neighbours if we are to allow police use of “crime predicting” technology to become anymore embedded in our neighbourhoods.
We all want to feel safe in our local areas, but real safety comes from investing in our communities – not from surveillance that fuels fear and distrust.
That is why I urge you to stand in solidarity with your local community, by bringing forward a motion to ban this dangerous tech. As your constituent, I want to feel confident that my rights and safety are being protected.
Please take urgent action to prohibit the use of “crime-predicting” technologies and protect the rights and freedoms of all."