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Missouri couple claim their newborn baby's name has NOTHING to do with Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift after 'attention-seeking' backlash
Missouri couple claim their newborn baby's name has NOTHING to do with Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift after 'attention-seeking' backlash

Daily Mail​

time01-08-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

Missouri couple claim their newborn baby's name has NOTHING to do with Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift after 'attention-seeking' backlash

Robert Dillon and Haley Richardson naming their newborn baby Kelce Taylor-Grace Dillion caused a stir online, with the parents claiming their choice had nothing to do with going viral. On Friday, Liberty Hospital at the University of Kansas revealed a sweet photo of a newborn on its Facebook page. The tyke was swaddled in a white blanket with a big yellow bow on her head, lying next to a red Kansas City Chiefs jersey with the name Kelce on it. A sign just above the infant's head featured a cartoon of Swift in cowboy boots and announced her name would be Kelce Taylor. Being in the heart of Chiefs Kingdom with a name like that was sure to get attention. Yet, the new parents insist it was the right fit for them and nothing having to do with public perception. 'We felt like the name was appropriate because we would like her to grow up to have his spirit of helping others and making sure his community is better off when he leaves than when he got there,' Dillon said per TODAY. 'Give her some really great people to kind of emulate as she gets older, if she wants to,' Richardson added. The post from Liberty Hospital has garnered more than 12k likes since it was posted. Plenty of reaction came in about the name. 'Send this to the podcast. I'm sure Travis would be honored,' suggested one commenter. 'Gosh I hope Travis and Taylor never break up,' wrote one cautious fan. Everything Kelce and Swift has had plenty of attention behind it since they became a public item in September 2023. Travis is about to enter another NFL season with plenty of speculation he could retire after his mainstream profile skyrocketed with having Swift on his arm. Swift has enjoyed more of a low-key 2025 after wrapping her worldwide 'Eras Tour' late last year. Swift nor Kelce have acknowledged the baby directly since its internet fame began.

AI, Wrong Guy: Investigating the use and dangers of artificial intelligence in Jacksonville policing
AI, Wrong Guy: Investigating the use and dangers of artificial intelligence in Jacksonville policing

Yahoo

time10-07-2025

  • Yahoo

AI, Wrong Guy: Investigating the use and dangers of artificial intelligence in Jacksonville policing

A Lee County man was wrongfully arrested last year after AI facial recognition technology used by the Jacksonville Sheriff's Office got it wrong. Experts are now warning about the potential dangers of the technology. The Jacksonville Beach Police Department said 51-year-old Robert Dillon allegedly tried luring a 12-year-old child in Jacksonville Beach back in November of 2023. According to a police report, Dillon was linked to a suspect caught on surveillance video in a Jacksonville Beach McDonald's through the use of the Jacksonville Sheriff's Office's AI facial recognition technology. Jacksonville Beach PD conferred with JSO, according to the report, and the technology found a 93% match between Dillon and the suspect using that technology. The report says police then provided a photo spread of Dillon and other similar-looking individuals to two witnesses. Both identified Dillon as the suspect. However, the case would later be completely dropped. The state attorney's office told Action News Jax the arrest will be wiped from Mr. Dillon's record. 'Police are not allowed under the Constitution to arrest somebody without probable cause,' Nate Freed-Wessler with the American Civil Liberties Union would later tell Action News Jax. 'And this technology expressly cannot provide probable cause, it is so glitchy, it's so unreliable. At best, it has to be viewed as an extremely unreliability lead because it often, often gets it wrong.' Freed-Wessler is the deputy director for the ACLU's Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project. He was also part of the legal team that helped sue on behalf of Robert Williams – a Detroit man wrongfully arrested thanks to facial recognition similar to the technology used to identify Dillon. The Detroit Police department settled that case for $300,000 in damages, and implemented safeguards when using AI facial recognition in their investigations. Freed-Wessler told Action News Jax that wrongful arrests using AI facial recognition are more common than many think, especially among people of color. 'It's partly because of photo quality problems in low light situations, when the cameras are trying to identify darker skin people,' Freed-Wessler explained. 'In fact, in almost all of the wrongful arrest cases around the country that we know of, it's been black people who have been incorrectly, wrongfully picked up by police.' Action News Jax sat down with Jacksonville Sheriff T.K. Waters to discuss the use of AI facial recognition technology in Jacksonville Sheriff's Office investigations. Sheriff Waters reassured the technology is simply a small piece of the investigative puzzle. 'If you came to me with a facial recognition hit and that was your probable cause, I would probably kick you out of my office because that's not how it works,' Sheriff Waters explained. 'And I can't speak to [the Jacksonville Beach Police Department's] investigation. I can tell you this, there better be a lot more that goes along with that to help make sure that we have the proper individual too.' [DOWNLOAD: Free Action News Jax app for alerts as news breaks] However, Freed-Wessler believes this procedure wasn't properly followed by Jacksonville Beach police in their investigation, adding that photo spreads based on a facial recognition match aren't sufficient evidence to make an arrest. 'When this technology gets it wrong, it's going to get it wrong with a face of somebody who looks similar to the suspect,' Freed-Wessler explained. 'It's no surprise that when police juice a lineup procedure with a doppelganger, with a lookalike, a witness is going to choose an innocent person.' Now, the Jacksonville Beach Police Department tells Action News Jax the investigation is still open after Dillon was cleared of any wrongdoing, adding in part: 'We will not be commenting on this matter beyond stating that all warrant requests are submitted to the state attorney's office. It is solely their decision whether or not to move forward with issuing a warrant.' Action News Jax reached out to the state attorney's office as well. A spokesman only confirmed Dillon was cleared of any wrongdoing. Now, Dillon's lawyer tells Action News Jax that he is seeking compensation, although he and Dillon declined interview requests. Meanwhile Courtney Barclay, an AI policy expert at Jacksonville University, said law enforcement agencies across the nation will continue to use AI and facial recognition. Barclay outlined the need to always second-guess. 'Every industry is just now starting to scratch the surface of the potential of AI, how it can impact our society. Law enforcement is no exception,' Barclay said. 'And so, again, we just want to be cognizant of the risks.' >>> STREAM ACTION NEWS JAX LIVE <<< [SIGN UP: Action News Jax Daily Headlines Newsletter]

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