Published 1 day ago • loading... • Updated 21 hours ago
Met Police touts success of live facial recognition trial after woman wanted for more than 20 years is arrested in London
The pilot used static cameras for the first time and recorded one false alert as police say the technology helped target serious offenders.
The Metropolitan Police concluded a six-month live facial-recognition trial in Croydon, where 24 static cameras scanned more than 470,000 people and resulted in 173 arrests for serious offences including kidnap and rape.
Running from October 2025 to March 2026, the pilot deployed static cameras on Croydon High Street instead of traditional mobile vans to locate individuals wanted by courts.
Arrests included a 36-year-old woman wanted since 2004, a 31-year-old man sought for voyeurism, and a 41-year-old man connected to a November rape; crime fell 10.5% and violence against women dropped 21%.
Lindsey Chiswick, national and Met lead for live facial recognition, said the results show why the technology is "such a powerful tool when it's used carefully, openly and in the right places."
The Met confirmed it will continue using static cameras in Croydon for regular deployments, maintaining the technology plays a vital part in keeping London safe.