logo
Schools are using AI surveillance to protect students. It also leads to false alarms — and arrests

Schools are using AI surveillance to protect students. It also leads to false alarms — and arrests

Associated Press13 hours ago
Lesley Mathis knows what her daughter said was wrong. But she never expected the 13-year-old girl would get arrested for it.
The teenage girl made an offensive joke while chatting online with her classmates, triggering the school's surveillance software.
Before the morning was even over, the Tennessee eighth grader was under arrest. She was interrogated, strip-searched and spent the night in a jail cell, her mother says.
Earlier in the day, her friends had teased the teen about her tanned complexion and called her 'Mexican,' even though she's not. When a friend asked what she was planning for Thursday, she wrote: 'on Thursday we kill all the Mexico's.'
Mathis said the comments were 'wrong' and 'stupid,' but context showed they were not a threat.
'It made me feel like, is this the America we live in?' Mathis said of her daughter's arrest. 'And it was this stupid, stupid technology that is just going through picking up random words and not looking at context.'
Surveillance systems in American schools increasingly monitor everything students write on school accounts and devices. Thousands of school districts across the country use software like Gaggle and Lightspeed Alert to track kids' online activities, looking for signs they might hurt themselves or others. With the help of artificial intelligence, technology can dip into online conversations and immediately notify both school officials and law enforcement.
Educators say the technology has saved lives. But critics warn it can criminalize children for careless words.
'It has routinized law enforcement access and presence in students' lives, including in their home,' said Elizabeth Laird, a director at the Center for Democracy and Technology.
Schools ratchet up vigilance for threats
In a country weary of school shootings, several states have taken a harder line on threats to schools. Among them is Tennessee, which passed a 2023 zero-tolerance law requiring any threat of mass violence against a school to be reported immediately to law enforcement.
The 13-year-old girl arrested in August 2023 had been texting with friends on a chat function tied to her school email at Fairview Middle School, which uses Gaggle to monitor students' accounts. (The Associated Press is withholding the girl's name to protect her privacy. The school district did not respond to a request for comment.)
Taken to jail, the teen was interrogated and strip-searched, and her parents weren't allowed to talk to her until the next day, according to a lawsuit they filed against the school system. She didn't know why her parents weren't there.
'She told me afterwards, 'I thought you hated me.' That kind of haunts you,' said Mathis, the girl's mother.
A court ordered eight weeks of house arrest, a psychological evaluation and 20 days at an alternative school for the girl.
Gaggle's CEO, Jeff Patterson, said in an interview that the school system did not use Gaggle the way it is intended. The purpose is to find early warning signs and intervene before problems escalate to law enforcement, he said.
'I wish that was treated as a teachable moment, not a law enforcement moment,' said Patterson.
Private student chats face unexpected scrutiny
Students who think they are chatting privately among friends often do not realize they are under constant surveillance, said Shahar Pasch, an education lawyer in Florida.
One teenage girl she represented made a joke about school shootings on a private Snapchat story. Snapchat's automated detection software picked up the comment, the company alerted the FBI, and the girl was arrested on school grounds within hours.
Alexa Manganiotis, 16, said she was startled by how quickly monitoring software works. West Palm Beach's Dreyfoos School of the Arts, which she attends, last year piloted Lightspeed Alert, a surveillance program. Interviewing a teacher for her school newspaper, Alexa discovered two students once typed something threatening about that teacher on a school computer, then deleted it. Lightspeed picked it up, and 'they were taken away like five minutes later,' Alexa said.
Teenagers face steeper consequences than adults for what they write online, Alexa said.
'If an adult makes a super racist joke that's threatening on their computer, they can delete it, and they wouldn't be arrested,' she said.
Amy Bennett, chief of staff for Lightspeed Systems, said that the software helps understaffed schools 'be proactive rather than punitive' by identifying early warning signs of bullying, self-harm, violence or abuse.
The technology can also involve law enforcement in responses to mental health crises. In Florida's Polk County Schools, a district of more than 100,000 students, the school safety program received nearly 500 Gaggle alerts over four years, officers said in public Board of Education meetings. This led to 72 involuntary hospitalization cases under the Baker Act, a state law that allows authorities to require mental health evaluations for people against their will if they pose a risk to themselves or others.
'A really high number of children who experience involuntary examination remember it as a really traumatic and damaging experience — not something that helps them with their mental health care,' said Sam Boyd, an attorney with the Southern Poverty Law Center. The Polk and West Palm Beach school districts did not provide comments.
An analysis shows a high rate of false alarms
Information that could allow schools to assess the software's effectiveness, such as the rate of false alerts, is closely held by technology companies and unavailable publicly unless schools track the data themselves.
Gaggle alerted more than 1,200 incidents to the Lawrence, Kansas, school district in a recent 10-month period. But almost two-thirds of those alerts were deemed by school officials to be non-issues — including over 200 false alarms from student homework, according to an Associated Press analysis of data received via a public records request.
Students in one photography class were called to the principal's office over concerns Gaggle had detected nudity. The photos had been automatically deleted from the students' Google Drives, but students who had backups of the flagged images on their own devices showed it was a false alarm. District officials said they later adjusted the software's settings to reduce false alerts.
Natasha Torkzaban, who graduated in 2024, said she was flagged for editing a friend's college essay because it had the words 'mental health.'
'I think ideally we wouldn't stick a new and shiny solution of AI on a deep-rooted issue of teenage mental health and the suicide rates in America, but that's where we're at right now,' Torkzaban said. She was among a group of student journalists and artists at Lawrence High School who filed a lawsuit against the school system last week, alleging Gaggle subjected them to unconstitutional surveillance.
School officials have said they take concerns about Gaggle seriously, but also say the technology has detected dozens of imminent threats of suicide or violence.
'Sometimes you have to look at the trade for the greater good,' said Board of Education member Anne Costello in a July 2024 board meeting.
Two years after their ordeal, Mathis said her daughter is doing better, although she's still 'terrified' of running into one of the school officers who arrested her. One bright spot, she said, was the compassion of the teachers at her daughter's alternative school. They took time every day to let the kids share their feelings and frustrations, without judgment.
'It's like we just want kids to be these little soldiers, and they're not,' said Mathis. 'They're just humans.'
___
This reporting reviewed school board meetings posted on YouTube, courtesy of DistrictView, a dataset created by researchers Tyler Simko, Mirya Holman and Rebecca Johnson.
___
The Associated Press' education coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP's standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Another ‘Florida man' scandal presents danger for Mike Johnson and the House GOP
Another ‘Florida man' scandal presents danger for Mike Johnson and the House GOP

Yahoo

time8 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Another ‘Florida man' scandal presents danger for Mike Johnson and the House GOP

Mike Johnson's math problems may become much more difficult in the weeks to come. Already, the House GOP leader is stuck with an unruly caucus whose disparate factions have made the passage of most legislation an arduous process typically involving Donald Trump bullying one or more groups of lawmakers into line. The House of Representatives instead chose to cram many of the president's priorities into 'one big, beautiful bill' (a Trump nickname adopted by Congress) and passed it on a party-line basis in early July. The chamber came within a one-vote margin of the bill failing. Now, the growing scandal enveloping Rep. Cory Mills, a Republican from Florida's 7th congressional district, threatens to turn that margin against Johnson and GOP leadership and make the passage of future bills an even greater hurdle for the president's party. Mills, 45, is in his second term as a congressman. Having won re-election last year, the Seminole County representative was looking forward to a second term defined by his new chairmanship of a House subcommittee. Instead, he's being accused by the current reigning Miss United States of sextortion — she claims he threatened to release intimate images and videos of her after they broke up. Mills denied the allegations and argued in a statement on Wednesday that the woman's attorney, his former primary challenger, 'weaponized' the claim to damage his reputation. But the scandal is just one of several buzzing around the congressman. He's also accused of racking up tens of thousands of dollars in unpaid rent and is under a totally separate House Ethics Committee investigation looking into whether he improperly benefited from federal contracts. An incident at Mills's DC residence also led to a police investigation of Mills for assault earlier this year, though both he and the alleged victim denied an assault occurred. In short, Mills's baggage is becoming a problem. At the bare minimum, it's providing a target for Florida Democrats to go after as the 2026 midterms approach. But if he's forced out sooner, Johnson's problems become a lot bigger. The Cook Political Report rates Mills' district as +5 Republican, giving the GOP an edge but no guarantee of victory in an election over the next two years. Should Gov. Ron DeSantis be forced to call a special election, that could be a real issue for the GOP: Democrats have been consistently overperforming in special elections in 2025, even in districts with strong Republican bents. Three have already announced plans to run for the seat next year. The drip-drip of headlines is already making Mills's colleagues nervous, Politico reported on Wednesday. Mills's bad press marks the third time since the 2024 elections that a 'Florida Man' member of the House has caused headaches for Mike Johnson and the caucus as a whole, and earned the derisive label synonymous with chaotic, bad decision-making and trashy behavior. First, the surprise resignation of Matt Gaetz just weeks after his successful re-election threw the House into a pre-Trump tizzy. The spat over his Ethics Committee report, which looked into allegations that he pursued underage girls for sex, led to Gaetz's failed bid to become Trump's attorney general and a special election, while casting a massive shadow over the president's transition. Gaetz denied the allegations, but dodging efforts to investigate them cost him his political career. Then, another Florida congressman, Randy Fine, earned a condemnation from a fellow Republican, Marjorie Taylor Greene, after tweeting 'starve away' in response to reports of widespread famine and devastation in Gaza; Fine is one of Israel's most vocal supporters in the House, even among Republicans. Since joining the House, he's also made racist statements about Rep. Ilhan Omar, a Muslim and Somali-American congresswoman from Minnesota. Those won't cause him much trouble with Republican leadership, who rarely punish that sort of thing, but could earn him a censure or even expulsion if they continue under a Democratic speaker in 2027 or beyond. As Mike Johnson and Donald Trump look for ways to expand their single-digit majority with help from unprecedented gerrymandering attempts in Texas and other GOP states, one has to wonder whether the caucus would be served by examining why members from one reddening state keep giving them so much trouble.

Boxes of material on Aurora homicide cases recovered from home of retired detective
Boxes of material on Aurora homicide cases recovered from home of retired detective

CBS News

time11 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Boxes of material on Aurora homicide cases recovered from home of retired detective

The Aurora Police Department announced Thursday that numerous boxes of material from old homicide cases were discovered at the home of a former detective. Aurora Police Chief Todd Chamberlain said the department is undergoing an organizational transformation, allowing detectives to revisit cold cases. Chamberlain explained the discovery was made as detectives were reviewing a case from 1997 when they were unable to locate materials that were part of the investigation. When they were unable to find the hard copy files or anything in the digital evidence system, they reached out to the original Major Crimes Homicide Unit detective who worked on the case. The detective worked in the unit from 1996 until 2011, said Chamberlain, and retired from the department in 2022. After the department contacted him, the former detective brought a plastic bag to police headquarters containing numerous documents, VHS tapes, photos and other material from the investigation. The department questioned the former detective and learned that he had material from multiple homicide cases he worked on during his time with the unit. He consented to a search of his home, where officers found boxes of old case files. "In the floorboards of the retired detective's home, we located 30 boxes that were recovered that contained binders, reports, photographs, VHS tapes, handwritten notes, and other documents related to investigations and cases that he had worked," said Chamberlain. Chamberlain asserted that none of the boxes contained physical evidence such as blood, fingerprints or tangible objects connected to these cases. They primarily contained notes, documents, videotapes of interviews and similar material, he added. "As we immediately discovered what was occurring, we got together with parties of the city, with legal counsel, with internal operations, both all of our chiefs, our detective personnel," said Chamberlain. "We looked at the depth and breadth of what we were contending with, and we set about a very specific and very strategic plan of action to make sure that, one, we have accountability for everything that occurred, and then also, we made sure that nothing in the future like this ever happens again." He said the department placed all of the material in a secure area and contacted the District Attorney's Office to ensure the 17th and 18th districts could access and research all of it. Both offices are conducting independent investigations into the materials. The retired detective consented to another search of his home, and authorities said they did not find any further case materials located there. Chamberlain said that, over the course of several months, they checked every item recovered to determine any issues that may arise from the materials that were taken. "We have also worked with our detective personnel, specifically cross-referencing every item that has been impacted, any open investigations, any previous investigations, anything that is ongoing to make sure that none of the information that was gathered in the retired detective's home was pertinent, was impactful, or involved any type of conflict whatsoever," Chamberlain said. He asserted that the recovered materials did not compromise any court cases and that many of the recovered files were redundant, or copies that the retired detective kept. There was also no indication of any wrongdoing, he said. "At this time, our detectives have found that there is no indication that the recovered case material compromised any prosecutions," he stated. "And, again, I want to reiterate that there is no indication at this point that there is anybody that was tried, anybody that was held accountable, any case or any victim, any suspects that were impacted in any way by any of the material that was located in that retired detective's home." He said the department takes responsibility for the poor recordkeeping, stating that "It is without question, unacceptable," and that he will ensure the department does better. Chamberlain said the department has completely updated its case management system to digitize the materials in binders to better maintain and control case data.

ICE takes 16 people into custody at 2 Pittsburgh-area Emiliano's restaurants
ICE takes 16 people into custody at 2 Pittsburgh-area Emiliano's restaurants

CBS News

time11 minutes ago

  • CBS News

ICE takes 16 people into custody at 2 Pittsburgh-area Emiliano's restaurants

A spokesperson for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement confirmed they took 16 people who were "illegally present in the United States" into custody Thursday from Emiliano's restaurants in Richland and Cranberry townships. A snippet of the raid inside the Richland Township location at the Richland Mall was caught on camera. Nidia Oliver raced over when she learned what was happening. She's friends with many of the workers at the business. "Somebody inside told me that they were trying to open safes and open in the office all the drawers and violating all that private property," Oliver said. A spokesperson for ICE told KDKA they executed search warrants at both the Richland Township Emiliano's location and the one on Route 19 in Cranberry Township, where people encountered a similar scene of police and unmarked vehicles. ICE said they had information that the locations "were employing illegal aliens." At each restaurant, several volunteers like Erin Riley showed up from Casa San Jose, a nonprofit that serves the greater Pittsburgh area's Latino immigrants. "They put a lot of effort into blocking off the entryway so that we could not see exactly what was happening," Riley said. KDKA captured a white van that was behind the Richland Mall leaving the premises. According to the nonprofit, ICE officers detained nine workers in Richland Township and seven in Cranberry. "It is terrible to see this happening in the United States, because all these people are honestly trying to make a living," Oliver said. On social media, Emiliano's wrote in a post that "federal agents stormed our restaurants in a show of force that went far beyond anything reasonable or humane. They didn't just detain people – they raided the heart of our business, tore through our spaces, and left behind a trail of fear, confusion, destruction. Our kitchens were flipped. Our walk-ins emptied. Food trashed. Doors broken." They went on to say, "We are standing by our team. We are working with legal experts and community partners to support the people impacted." KDKA reached out to ICE about the damage the restaurant says they caused but hasn't heard back yet. Emiliano's said they will reopen their restaurants. A timeline is unclear. ICE said the investigation is ongoing.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store