London cops hail fixed facial recognition cams after suspects collared every 35 mins
Public sector
Croydon trial helped secure 173 arrests, though civil liberties groups remain unconvinced
London's Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) is giving its six-month trial of static live facial recognition (LFR) cameras credit for helping it secure an arrest every 35 minutes.
The Met's LFR chief said the results show why LFR is "such a powerful tool" for coppers, who, across 24 operations between October 2025 and March 2026, made 173 arrests.
Those arrested included people suspected of kidnapping and sex crimes, as well as others who had evaded law enforcement for decades.
Among those 173 arrests was that of a 36-year-old woman who had been wanted by the police after failing to appear at court for an assault in 2004.
The Met also arrested a 31-year-old man, wanted for more than six months in connection with voyeurism, and a 41-year-old man suspected of rape in November 2025.
Thirty-seven of the...
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