What they're not telling you: Angela Lipps, 50, was first arrested in Tennessee on July 14, according to a statement from the Fargo Police Department and a verified GoFundMe page. KVRR; Cass County Sheriff's Office AI See all topics Facebook Tweet Email Link Threads Link Copied! Follow A Tennessee grandmother spent more than five months in jail after police used an AI facial-recognition-enforcement-gap-and-what-is-allready-happening.html" title="EU Facial Recognition Enforcement Gap, and what is allready happening." style="color:#1a1a1a;text-decoration:underline;text-decoration-style:dotted;font-weight:500;">facial recognition tool to link her to crimes committed in North Dakota – a state she says she’d never been to before.

Marcus Webb
The Take
Marcus Webb · Surveillance & Tech Privacy

The arrest of Porsche Dotson isn't a cautionary tale about AI—it's evidence that law enforcement deliberately weaponized inadequate technology. Memphis PD ran her photo through facial recognition, got a match flagged as investigative lead (not ID), then arrested her anyway. This wasn't algorithm failure. This was policy failure married to departmental negligence. I watched this pattern from inside contracting. Agencies know—*know*—these systems produce false positives at rates between 5-35% depending on demographics. They deploy them anyway because the tool transfers liability to the machine. A detective can now claim the algorithm said it, not them. What's genuinely infuriating: Dotson's case is exceptional only in her vindication. The system designed dozens of similar misidentifications into the booking pipeline before one defendant had resources to fight back. The real scandal isn't that AI made a mistake. It's that police adopted a tool with known failure rates and structured procedures that ignore those failure rates entirely. This continues until departments face material consequences—not policy reviews.

What the Documents Show

Police in Fargo, North Dakota, have acknowledged “a few errors” in the case and pledged changes in their operations but stopped short of issuing a direct apology. Angela Lipps, 50, was first arrested in Tennessee on July 14, according to a statement from the Fargo Police Department and a verified GoFundMe for Lipps. Unbeknownst to Lipps, a warrant had been issued for her arrest weeks earlier – in Fargo, over 1,000 miles away from her Tennessee home. Months before, several instances of bank fraud had occurred in and around Fargo, according to police. In their search for a suspect in the bank fraud cases, investigators used “our partner agency’s facial recognition technology” as well as “additional investigative steps independent of AI to assist in identification” before submitting the report to the Cass County State Attorney’s Office, Fargo Police Department Chief Dave Zibolski told CNN in an email.

🔎 Mainstream angle: The corporate press either ignored this story entirely or buried it in a 3-sentence brief. The framing, when it appeared at all, focused on process rather than impact.

Follow the Money

But Zibolski said at a Tuesday news conference that his police department’s reliance on some of the information from a neighboring agency’s AI system is “part of the issue,” referring to errors made in Lipps’ case. “At some point, our partner agency over at West Fargo purchased their own AI facial recognition system that we were not aware of at the executive level …, and we would not have allowed that to be used, and it has since been prohibited,” he said. The West Fargo Police Department told CNN that they use Clearview AI , a startup with a database of billions of photos scraped from the internet, including social media. Clearview “identified a potential suspect with similar features to Angela Lipps” and West Fargo police shared that report with Fargo police, reads a statement from the police department. The statement notes that West Fargo police didn’t forward any charges and didn’t have enough evidence to charge anyone for the fraud case in West Fargo. CNN has reached out to Clearview AI for comment.

What Else We Know

It’s unclear what other evidence was used in the investigation to tie Lipps to the crimes. Lipps’ case comes as police departments across the country have rapidly integrated new technologies, including AI. But police use of the novel technology has attracted criticism – and it’s been linked to other cases of misidentification. On July 1, a North Dakota judge signed a warrant for Lipps’ arrest, with nationwide extradition. She was arrested July 14 and spent over three months in a Tennessee jail before being extradited, according to Fargo police and her lawyers. It wasn’t until October that Tennessee law enforcement told the Cass County Sheriff’s Office in North Dakota they had Lipps’ extradition waiver.

Primary Sources

What are they not saying? Who benefits from this story staying buried? Follow the regulatory filings, the court dockets, and the FOIA releases. The truth is in the paperwork — it always is.

Disclosure: NewsAnarchist aggregates from public records, API feeds (Federal Register, CourtListener, MuckRock, Hacker News), and independent media. AI-assisted synthesis. Always verify primary sources linked above.