- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message
AI Error Throws Innocent Tennessee Grandmother in North Dakota Jail for Nearly Six Months
Posted on 3/16/26 at 9:19 pm
Posted on 3/16/26 at 9:19 pm
These officers are no Marge Gundersons.
https://futurism.com/artificial-intelligence/ai-grandmother-jail-mistake
https://futurism.com/artificial-intelligence/ai-grandmother-jail-mistake
quote:
An AI system’s little oopsie, and a police department’s staggering incompetence, landed an innocent grandma in jail.
Harrowing reporting by North Dakota radio station WDAY details how the 50-year-old Angela Lipps spent nearly six months in the clink after Fargo cops using an AI facial recognition tool flagged her as a suspect in a bank fraud case in the state.
The mother of three — and grandmother of five — says she’s lived her entire life in north-central Tennessee, roughly a thousand miles away from where the crimes she was accused of committing took place. US marshals showed up at her doorstep last July while she was babysitting four kids and arrested her at gunpoint.
First, Lipps was booked in a Tennessee county jail as a fugitive from justice from North Dakota. And because she was considered a fugitive, she was held without bail and sat in the jail for nearly four initial months. Lipps received a court-appointed lawyer for the extradition process, WDAY reported, and was told she’d have to travel to North Dakota to fight the charges.
“I’ve never been to North Dakota, I don’t know anyone from North Dakota,” Lipps told the station.
According to Fargo police department files obtained by WDAY, the error arose from surveillance footage detectives viewed while investigating bank fraud cases in April and May 2025. The footage shows a woman using a fake US Army military ID to withdraw tens of thousands of dollars.
To generate leads, the detectives turned to AI facial recognition software, which identified Lipps as the person in the video.
The cops seemingly did little to verify the AI’s lead. Court documents showed that a detective agreed that the suspect’s facial features, body type, and hair were a match to Lipps. But Lipps said that no one from the Fargo police department ever called to question her.
Adding insult to injury, the Fargo police didn’t pick up Lipps from her Tennessee jail until 108 days after her arrest, after which she was flown to North Dakota to make a court appearance. The first time they interviewed her was in December, when she was being held in the North Dakota lock-up, after she had spent more than five months behind bars.
“If the only thing you have is facial recognition, I might want to dig a little deeper,” Jay Greenwood, a lawyer representing Lipps in North Dakota, told WDAY.
Greenwood produced bank records showing that Lipps was more than 1,200 miles away in Tennessee at the time that investigators say the bank fraud was perpetrated. With Greenwood having essentially done their jobs for them, the police released her from jail on Christmas Eve, and dropped the case.
But Lipps says that the police didn’t even offer to pay for her trip home, and with no money to her name, she was stranded in Fargo. Sympathetic local defense attorneys pooled together money to pay for a hotel room, and a local nonprofit called the F5 Project arranged her trip back to Tennessee.
“I had my summer clothes on, no coat, it was so cold outside, snow on the ground, scared, I wanted out but I didn’t know what I was going to do, how I was going to get home,” Lipps said.
Lipps says she lost her home, her car, and her dog as a result of her stint in jail. No one from the Fargo police department has apologized for the disastrous mix-up, she said.
This isn’t the only criminal case of mistake identity caused by AI tools. In April last year, the New York Police Department arrested a man named Trevis Williams based on a facial recognition match from grainy CCTV footage — despite Williams being over half a foot taller than the suspect in the video. That February, a woman in Detroit sued the city’s police department, alleging that it arrested her after a facial recognition tool identified her as a murder suspect, despite similarly blatant discrepancies in her physical appearance.
Posted on 3/16/26 at 9:26 pm to Partha
this can't be real
nevermind, it's real
nevermind, it's real
This post was edited on 3/16/26 at 9:28 pm
Posted on 3/16/26 at 9:27 pm to Harry Rex Vonner
@grok is this real
Posted on 3/16/26 at 9:28 pm to Partha
quote:
Lipps says she lost her home, her car, and her dog as a result of her stint in jail. No one from the Fargo police department has apologized for the disastrous mix-up, she said.
The attorneys are salivating
Posted on 3/16/26 at 9:32 pm to SidewalkTiger
I hope the city of Fargo gets raped on this
Give that lady 100 million dollars
Give that lady 100 million dollars
Posted on 3/16/26 at 9:33 pm to Partha
She’s going to be getting a new house and a lifetime supply of cars from this.
Posted on 3/16/26 at 9:35 pm to Harry Rex Vonner
quote:
I hope the city of Fargo gets raped on this
The Fargo Police chief announced retirement a few days ago as well
https://www.mprnews.org/story/2026/03/12/fargo-police-chief-dave-zibolski-announces-retirement
quote:
Fargo Police Chief Dave Zibolski is retiring. He has led the Fargo Police Department for more than five years and has been in law enforcement for more than four decades.
Over the last two years, Zibolski has overseen two consecutive years of declines in serious crime and a 10 percent drop last year alone. The city says he’s helped modernize the department, leveraging cameras and drones for police work.
At the same time, however, Zibolski drew criticism after a pair of deadly shootings last year. He didn't hold a press conference until 36 hours after the incident. Two city commissioners called on him to resign, and he apologized.
Still, Mayor Tim Mahoney said Zibolski is leaving the department in a good place.
"Your team's ready to fly, your eagles have all made it off the ground, and I think we'll continue on that legacy,” he said. “We'll continue to build and continue to make the department better."
Zibolski's last day as chief is March 27, and the city commission is set to name his interim successor by the end of March.
Zibolski said he thinks Assistant Chief Travis Stefonowicz should fill the role.
“He's prepared. He's got the skills. I think he's very well supported by the department as well," he said. “The commission has to decide that, but that would certainly be my recommendation.”
Three spots on the Fargo City Commission are up for election in June, including mayor. Mahoney, who is ineligible to run again, said he supports waiting to appoint a permanent chief until the new commission is elected.
“We'll have two new commissioners, we'll have a new mayor, and (will) allow those people to make those decisions,” he said.
He needs to answer for this as well.
This post was edited on 3/16/26 at 9:38 pm
Posted on 3/16/26 at 10:02 pm to Partha
Maybe they can make a TV show and call it Fargo :
Granny is about to move to Beverly Hills
Posted on 3/16/26 at 10:27 pm to Partha
quote:
Still, Mayor Tim Mahoney said Zibolski is leaving the department in a good place. "Your team's ready to fly, your eagles have all made it off the ground, and I think we'll continue on that legacy,” he said. “We'll continue to build and continue to make the department better."
No one who did this will really feel any pain. Nothing to compair to the damage done.
Posted on 3/16/26 at 10:35 pm to Partha
The judge that signed the arrest warrant with only unproven AI facial recognition as the probable cause should be held responsible.
Posted on 3/16/26 at 10:37 pm to nes2010
quote:
one who did this will really feel any pain. Nothing to compair to the damage done.
Qualified immunity bro.
I hope she wins $100mil, and the good people of Fargo have to pay bonds for years to recover.
This post was edited on 3/17/26 at 3:28 am
Posted on 3/16/26 at 10:38 pm to Partha
People hate lawyers, but this is why we need lawyers. It's a shame this lady had to rely on an apparently disinterested public defender. A legit attorney would have kept her from even spending the night in jail over this shitshow of a case.
Posted on 3/16/26 at 11:44 pm to Partha
quote:
The mother of three — and grandmother of five
Where were her family and friends all this time?
Posted on 3/17/26 at 3:51 am to biglego
We know she has a family, we don't know her family situation or their means.
It really doesn't matter anyways. This was caused by the Fargo PD and their zealous incompetence and an innocent lady suffered
It really doesn't matter anyways. This was caused by the Fargo PD and their zealous incompetence and an innocent lady suffered
Posted on 3/17/26 at 4:40 am to Jackie Chan
Was her picture in some kind of criminal database or did AI pull her picture from Facebook? How could the cops even think it was a lady from Tennessee without questioning her?
Posted on 3/17/26 at 5:20 am to BamaSaint
Probably drivers license photo.
Posted on 3/17/26 at 5:27 am to Jackie Chan
This is pretty nuts. She deserves at least a million.
5 months was long enough to derail her life and if she was babysitting 4 children at the time it probably put a serious burden on their parents as well
5 months was long enough to derail her life and if she was babysitting 4 children at the time it probably put a serious burden on their parents as well
Posted on 3/17/26 at 5:38 am to Partha
The AI screwup was the least of them. Is this even real? Colossal frick ups.
Posted on 3/17/26 at 5:41 am to Harry Rex Vonner
quote:
US marshals showed up at her doorstep last July while she was babysitting four kids and arrested her at gunpoint. First, Lipps was booked in a Tennessee county jail as a fugitive from justice from North Dakota. And because she was considered a fugitive, she was held without bail and sat in the jail for nearly four initial months.
The worst part of it occurred back home.
Popular
Back to top


16










