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Facial recognition firm wrongly marks Greater Manchester woman as shoplifter

Facial recognition firm wrongly marks Greater Manchester woman as shoplifter
Representative iStock image

Retail security and facial recognition firm Facewatch is said to be a cause of harassment for a Greater Manchester-based woman when she was wrongly accused of shoplifting due to an apparent mix-up with a facial recognition system.

As reported by BBC last week, Danielle Horan was escorted from the two branches of Home Bargains stores in Greater Manchester on two occasions, without any explanation.


The woman later discovered that she was falsely accused of stealing about £10 worth of items after her profile was added to Facewatch's facial recognition watchlist.

Horan told BBC, Horan, that she at first "thought it was a joke" when the manager of Home Bargains in Regent Road, Salford, asked her to leave the shop on 24 May.

She said: "Everyone was looking at me. All the customers at the till and I was like 'for what'?'"

Earlier this month, a similar incident happened again at another Home Bargains store in Fallowfield, Manchester, when she visited the store with her 81-year-old mother.

"As soon as I stepped my foot over the threshold of the door, they were radioing each other and they all surrounded me and were like 'you need to leave the store'," she said.

"My heart sunk and I was anxious and bothered for my mum as well because she was stressed.

"But I was ready for it because of what happened the previous time. I just fought my corner and said 'you need to tell me why'."

According to the report, it was only after repeated emails to both Facewatch and Home Bargains that she eventually found there had been an allegation of theft of about £10 worth of toilet rolls on 8 May.

Her picture had somehow been circulated to local stores alerting them that they should not allow her entry.

Horan said she checked her bank account to confirm she had indeed paid for the items before Facewatch eventually responded to say a review of the incident showed she had not stolen anything.

"Because I was persistent I finally got somewhere but it wasn't easy, it was really stressful," she said. "My anxiety was really bad – it really played with my mind, questioning what I've done for days. I felt anxious and sick. My stomach was turning for a week."

Meanwhile, Madeleine Stone, senior advocacy officer at the civil liberties campaign group Big Brother Watch, said they had been contacted by more than 35 people who have complained of being wrongly placed on facial recognition watchlists.

"They're being wrongly flagged as criminals," Stone said. "They've given no due process, kicked out of stores. This is having a really serious impact."

"Historically in Britain, we have a history that you are innocent until proven guilty but when an algorithm, a camera and a facial recognition system gets involved, you are guilty."

Big Brother Watch has called for the UK government to completely ban facial recognition technology from retailers.

Facewatch told BBC, "We acknowledge and understand how distressing this experience must have been and the retailer has since undertaken additional staff training."

The firm said a review of the incident later showed the items had been paid for.