this post was submitted on 08 Jun 2026
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A San Diego police department is facing a lawsuit after jailing a man for a month based on a Flock camera alert that cops allegedly should have known, based on the timestamp, did not depict the car that they were looking for.

Last November, Hugo Parra was arrested on felony charges after San Diego police relied on Flock data and a witness statement to wrongly connect him to an attempted carjacking at gunpoint, the Times of San Diego reported. Cops were looking for a red Alfa Romeo car with tinted windows and a man wearing a gray hoodie, and Parra happened to be wearing a white hoodie while riding in a friend’s car that roughly matched the vehicle description.

Although Flock cameras can capture license plate data, cops did not have even a partial plate to help them verify if the car was involved in a violent crime. But the Flock data cops used to justify the arrest actually showed that Parra was five miles away at the time of the crime, Parra’s attorney, Alex Coolman, told the Times of San Diego. Rather than arrest him, cops could have used that data, as well as Parra’s cellphone location data, to corroborate Parra’s statement that he was innocent, Coolman said.

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[–] LovableSidekick@lemmy.world 23 points 1 day ago (2 children)

I got pulled over on suspicion of bank robbery once, because I was driving away from an area where a guy had robbed a Washington Mutual a few minutes earlier. He fit my description and was wearing a gray hoodie like me, driving an old yellow Toyota pickup like me. The cops even showed me the bank surveillance photo, which was taken from over his shoulder and didn't capture his face. He had the same shape head and was even bald on top like me. I mean, I would have arrested myself lol. What convinced them was that our glasses frames were a little different. Plus I didn't have any loot.

[–] _apokalipto_@lemmy.world 21 points 1 day ago

So where did you hide the loot?

[–] explodicle@sh.itjust.works 4 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

How to rob banks in Metropolis