.
Feedback

DMV Uses Technology to Catch ID Fraud

DMV's facial recognition technology leads to 126 arrests in Suffolk County since 2010.

The state Department of Motor Vehicles has identified 13,000 possible cases of identity fraud since facial recognition technology went into service in 2010.

Those investigations led to 2,500 arrests statewide – 126 in Suffolk County alone – Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced this week.

“Facial recognition technology has been an extremely valuable tool for our investigators in combating identity theft,” DMV Director of Field Investigations Owen McShane said. “This initiative has not only helped to make the state’s highways safer but also identified many individuals who attempted to commit fraud at taxpayer expense.”

The technology has mostly been used to help identify individuals who attempt to obtain more than one driver license or non-driver identification document. In Suffolk, 726 cases were opened.

Facial recognition technology also flagged more than 100 people with felony warrants statewide, including a fugitive for 17 years after robbing a bank in Nassau County in 1993.

The University at Albany’s Institute for Traffic Safety Management and Research assisted the DMV in evaluating the driving records for people identified as having two or more licenses and found:

  • 50 percent identified through facial recognition had one valid NYS license while having a second record that was suspended or revoked.
  • 20 percent were suspended or revoked under every known record.
  • 30 percent had multiple valid licenses. 

The evaluation also included a comparison of the driving histories of the individuals identified via facial recognition against the rest of the state’s driver license population and found:

  • 63 percent had been involved in a crash, compared to 42 percent of all licensed drivers in the state.
  • 9 percent had been convicted of impaired driving, compared to 2 percent of all licensed drivers in the state.
  • 29 percent had been convicted of a cell phone violation, compared to 9 percent of all licensed drivers in the state.
  • 46 percent had been convicted of unlicensed operation, compared to 7 percent of all licensed drivers in the state.
  • 56 percent had been convicted of a seat belt violation, compared to 21 percent of all licensed drivers in the state.
  • 35 percent had accumulated six or more points on their license records within an 18-month period at some point in time after Nov. 18, 2004, compared to 11 percent of all licensed drivers in the state.

“DMV’s effective use of facial recognition technology shows how our state government is progressing with a 21st century world to work for New Yorkers,” Cuomo said. “Through this program, we are successfully taking dangerous drivers off our roads, helping to track down criminals, and protecting taxpayer dollars – sending a clear message that New York State does not tolerate identity fraud and those who try will be caught.” 

Newsletter & Alerts

Get the best stories each day and important breaking news

Subscribe

Not from Miller Place-Rocky Point Patch? Find your Local Patch »

Loading comments ...
Note Article
Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
MP Majority May 17, 2013 at 01:41 pm
Spoken like a true teacher. Did you know that the average school teacher is only paying 15% of theRead More actual cost of health care premiums for themselves and their families, when Medical healthcare insurance premiums are rising at an alarming 17% per annum? Do you realize that teachers are paid an additional stipend if they work more than 3 consecutive periods in a day? Are you aware that teacher pensions were protected during the stock market crash of 2008, when the average person's 401K was totally at risk? Perhaps if teachers realized how good they have it - look at the BIG picture and outside of their bubble - then they would complain less. Oh and yes, we need our loftily-paid Administrators to kick in some of the salaries, to help pay for stuff. Hard to believe the school districts' mantras that "it's all for the kids".
Hallock Landing Beach
wendy L Berman May 10, 2013 at 05:20 pm
Our private street is willing to pay to have the sand plowed back up along our bulheads!!!! The DecRead More and the and the town of crookhaven will not allow it!!! The army corp of engineers are busy with the $$$$$ hamptons!!!!
Ted Ratter May 10, 2013 at 04:29 pm
sorry hit enter and it popped my statement in above too soon... I'm likely right that all townsRead More along sound need to have remediation plans on board, but that doesn't mean they have the funds to get it done. I would not be surprised if the meatballs running crookhaven missed the mother-load of that Superfund.
Ted Ratter May 10, 2013 at 04:27 pm
Jennifer, if Bonner speaks about the town trying to buy the property next to east of Scotts beachRead More (or scots - spelling?) forget about it. that property is meaningless to issues east of that point. Oh by the way this is not confirmed yet but I hear our new Highway guy is/was the lawyer for the guy who owns that track of land. crookhaven makes strange bedfellows hey?
My Mom My Life
Marian Larson May 9, 2013 at 06:45 pm
That made me smile! My mom passed away when I was a child and not a day has gone by in the past 37Read More years that I don't think about her and wonder who this woman was who gave her children the gift of life but never had the opportunity to see her children grow up. The little that I remember of her warms my heart. I wish all mothers, stepmothers, grandmothers and Godmothers a blessed Mother's Day! :)