The Prague Post - Sao Paulo AI policing nabs criminals, and a few innocents

EUR -
AED 4.189195
AFN 71.863394
ALL 94.21881
AMD 419.878305
ANG 2.0423
AOA 1046.015122
ARS 1685.364164
AUD 1.653202
AWG 2.054673
AZN 1.920848
BAM 1.956208
BBD 2.297479
BDT 140.589301
BGN 1.928775
BHD 0.43008
BIF 3393.577513
BMD 1.140693
BND 1.475495
BOB 7.899473
BRL 5.892711
BSD 1.140738
BTN 107.784101
BWP 15.501891
BYN 3.30816
BYR 22357.577591
BZD 2.294158
CAD 1.620263
CDF 2586.528836
CHF 0.922193
CLF 0.026738
CLP 1052.380215
CNY 7.7546
CNH 7.753568
COP 3927.348049
CRC 517.403297
CUC 1.140693
CUP 30.228357
CVE 110.287502
CZK 24.260478
DJF 203.127882
DKK 7.474321
DOP 67.833543
DZD 151.910582
EGP 56.181859
ERN 17.110391
ETB 183.900797
FJD 2.562851
FKP 0.864482
GBP 0.862141
GEL 3.017169
GGP 0.864482
GHS 12.901406
GIP 0.864482
GMD 83.270405
GNF 10000.040297
GTQ 8.702737
GYD 238.604499
HKD 8.945672
HNL 30.527095
HRK 7.534618
HTG 149.089765
HUF 354.307207
IDR 20363.646692
ILS 3.394844
IMP 0.864482
INR 107.777839
IQD 1494.29833
IRR 1568737.682503
ISK 144.012701
JEP 0.864482
JMD 179.617434
JOD 0.808737
JPY 184.627988
KES 147.69709
KGS 99.753682
KHR 4586.915757
KMF 495.06024
KPW 1026.62386
KRW 1760.750652
KWD 0.353284
KYD 0.950577
KZT 553.843289
LAK 25584.107754
LBP 102147.450057
LKR 383.556575
LRD 207.598716
LSL 18.742142
LTL 3.368169
LVL 0.689994
LYD 7.328495
MAD 10.689528
MDL 20.16176
MGA 4853.969073
MKD 61.683271
MMK 2395.055099
MNT 4083.597231
MOP 9.214719
MRU 45.525488
MUR 53.886625
MVR 17.623409
MWK 1977.968883
MXN 19.93425
MYR 4.643751
MZN 72.886627
NAD 18.742306
NGN 1576.175339
NIO 41.978381
NOK 11.327648
NPR 172.45643
NZD 2.017583
OMR 0.438622
PAB 1.140713
PEN 3.895378
PGK 5.008044
PHP 69.788675
PKR 317.197427
PLN 4.287299
PYG 6946.447724
QAR 4.158067
RON 5.241469
RSD 117.358512
RUB 88.6904
RWF 1674.512289
SAR 4.285055
SBD 9.184804
SCR 16.994393
SDG 684.415923
SEK 11.086319
SGD 1.47544
SHP 0.851642
SLE 28.290723
SLL 23919.760471
SOS 651.930155
SRD 42.756578
STD 23610.03655
STN 24.505107
SVC 9.981036
SYP 126.083161
SZL 18.737741
THB 37.928601
TJS 10.574072
TMT 3.992425
TND 3.378804
TOP 2.746515
TRY 53.20463
TTD 7.754548
TWD 36.377855
TZS 2997.179274
UAH 51.19487
UGX 4180.871344
USD 1.140693
UYU 45.899566
UZS 13747.865222
VES 708.08842
VND 29988.811984
VUV 135.946941
WST 3.172133
XAF 656.087985
XAG 0.01955
XAU 0.000282
XCD 3.082779
XCG 2.05581
XDR 0.817159
XOF 656.090861
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.197797
ZAR 18.725253
ZMK 10267.599495
ZMW 20.651851
ZWL 367.302595
  • CMSC

    0.0700

    22

    +0.32%

  • RBGPF

    0.2000

    61.5

    +0.33%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0500

    18.7

    -0.27%

  • RIO

    0.0400

    93.78

    +0.04%

  • BCC

    -3.3400

    77.68

    -4.3%

  • AZN

    1.1200

    189.53

    +0.59%

  • BCE

    -0.2900

    22.63

    -1.28%

  • NGG

    0.3350

    83.345

    +0.4%

  • JRI

    0.1000

    12.89

    +0.78%

  • CMSD

    0.1000

    21.87

    +0.46%

  • VOD

    -0.2270

    13.663

    -1.66%

  • BTI

    -0.2800

    62.48

    -0.45%

  • GSK

    -0.0750

    52.425

    -0.14%

  • BP

    0.3950

    37.525

    +1.05%

  • RELX

    0.0250

    31.365

    +0.08%

Sao Paulo AI policing nabs criminals, and a few innocents
Sao Paulo AI policing nabs criminals, and a few innocents / Photo: Nelson ALMEIDA - AFP

Sao Paulo AI policing nabs criminals, and a few innocents

In the heart of Sao Paulo, a "prisonometer" keeps a live tally of people jailed due to Latin America's largest AI facial-recognition system, but its successes have been marred by mistaken arrests.

Text size:

The digital counter stands outside the Smart Sampa monitoring center, where dozens of police officers watch images streaming in from 40,000 cameras in the Brazilian megalopolis.

Latin America's largest city has long battled high rates of crime, and the AI technology was introduced in 2024 to scan the streets and compare images to those in judicial databases.

Smart Sampa's dragnet has swept up 3,000 fugitives, while nearly 4,000 people have been caught in the act of committing a crime.

"With the fugitives the system captured, we could fill seven prisons. Today I can no longer imagine Sao Paulo without Smart Sampa," municipal security secretary Orlando Morando told AFP about the program, which costs about two million dollars per month to run.

To show how it works, he uploads a photo of himself to the system. Within seconds, images of him in various locations around the city of 12 million people pop up on the screen.

"It reminds me of the book 1984 (by George Orwell), with all that control of people: I love it, I approve 100 percent," said Sonia Ferreira Silva, a 68-year-old retiree, standing next to a Smart Sampa truck serving as a mobile surveillance post on the iconic Avenida Paulista.

- Mistaken arrests -

But the system is far from foolproof.

Official transparency reports analyzed by AFP show that more than 8 percent of people identified as fugitives and arrested in Smart Sampa's first year had to be released due to errors.

At least 59 detainees were freed because the system mistook them for other people.

In December, an 80-year-old retiree spent hours under arrest because Smart Sampa confused him with a rapist.

And a month earlier, a group of psychiatric patients were attending therapy at a mental health center when armed police burst in and handcuffed one of them.

After hours at the police station, the detainee was released, and authorities said his arrest warrant was no longer valid.

The system relies not only on street cameras but also on cameras in public buildings -- including health centers -- and private buildings that agree to participate.

At least 141 people were arrested due to outdated warrants, but the Sao Paulo government argues that those mistakes are the judiciary's responsibility, not theirs.

"No one remained imprisoned by mistake: the people were released," said Morando.

- 'Civil control' -

Among the fugitives captured by Smart Sampa, almost half had their crimes classified as "other."

Nearly all of them are people who owe child support, a civil offense "that has little to do with public security," according to the report "Smart Sampa: Transparency for whom? Transparency of what?"

"Smart Sampa is presented as a solution to crime but is used for civil control," warns Amarilis Costa, director of the lawyers' network Liberdade and a co-author of the report.

The government denounces attempts to "discredit" Smart Sampa, boasting the city had seen a nearly 15 percent drop in robberies in 2025.

In 2024, nearly one in five cellphone robberies in Brazil, including violent muggings, occurred in Sao Paulo.

- 'No prejudice' -

The racial identity of more than half of those found guilty and jailed after being caught by Smart Sampa is not included in official data.

Costa said this creates an information gap that makes it impossibe to know whether Smart Sampa suffers from "algorithmic racism" in a country with one of the world's largest black populations.

Studies in several countries have suggested that AI facial recognition systems tend to make more mistakes with black people.

The government argues that the lack of racial data is the responsibility of the justice system.

"Smart Sampa has no prejudice -- we do not arrest people based on color," said Morando, the security secretary.

Most Smart Sampa arrests have occurred in outlying neighborhoods, with many of those detained migrants from poorer regions of Brazil's interior.

C.Novotny--TPP