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BackWestern Australia Police to Trial Real-Time Facial Recognition Cameras
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ABC Top Stories19.06.2026Política4 dk okumaAustralia

Western Australia Police to Trial Real-Time Facial Recognition Cameras

En resumen

  • Western Australia will pilot real-time facial recognition cameras in police vans to scan crowds for wanted individuals, sex offenders, and missing persons.
  • The technology will pixelate non-matches and delete data immediately, aiming to enhance community safety while addressing privacy concerns.

Resumen generado por IA

Por qué importa

Western Australia Police will trial real-time facial recognition cameras to scan crowds for wanted individuals, registered child sex offenders, and missing persons. This technology is new to Australia for live feeds, though facial recognition has been used on existing footage for over a decade.

Tamaño de fuente

Western Australia will become the first place in the country where police will trial real-time facial recognition cameras, scanning crowds for people wanted by police, registered child sex offenders and missing persons.

The cameras, which will be deployed in a marked police van outside major events or in crowded areas, will scan faces to be cross referenced with a database of targets.

Police Commissioner Col Blanch said that database will contain about 4,000 people with outstanding arrest warrants and thousands of registered child sex offenders, as well as people reported missing.

The commissioner said signs alerting the public to the cameras would be clearly visible.

"This is about specifying those in our community who are wanted by police."

If the technology detects a match, the image will be retained and an alert sent to nearby officers to confirm the person's identity.

'Increased freedoms and privacy'

Commissioner Blanch said while his force had used facial recognition technology on already obtained footage for more than a decade, it was the first time in Australia police had used live feeds for almost-instant facial detection.

He sought to quell concerns about potential breaches of privacy.

"CCTV cameras are everywhere. They are owned by private businesses, local councils, they are around the world ... and who are they owned by, no-one would know,"

"They capture information of everyone, they store pictures of everyone — for how long, I don't know.

"This technology here pixelates those who are not on the list, does not store information, deletes it immediately."

While this trial only includes one marked van, he did not rule out covert technology being used in the future, pointing to the force’s existing use of facial recognition systems.

"We already use facial recognition in a capacity that is not overt. We already do that," the commissioner said.

He said he wanted to the community to feel comfortable with the technology.

"We want the conversation and that debate to continue,"

"This is how we intend to keep our community safe. Let's have that conversation first before we decide to go any further."

Private cameras in use

Commissioner Blanch said private companies were already using live facial recognition.

In November 2025, the commissioner revealed police had access to private cameras recording the number plates of vehicles entering the car parks at a Westfield shopping centre in Perth's south.

Elsewhere in Australia, the national privacy commissioner found Bunnings had in 2024 breached the privacy of potentially hundreds of thousands of Australians through the use of facial recognition cameras to scan every customer on entry in an effort to reduce theft.

However, the ruling was later overturned, potentially paving the way for other major retailers to embrace the technology.

The privacy commissioner also found Kmart had breached Australians’ privacy by collecting their personal and sensitive information through a facial recognition technology system designed to tackle refund fraud.

Kmart was found not to have notified shoppers or sought their consent to use the technology to collect their biometric information.

Questions over protests

Commission Blanch said it was not his "intent" for the technology to be used at protests "except if we have intelligence that there is a significant risk of someone seeking to do harm".

But he said that could be the case at the upcoming Land Forces defence expo, which Perth will host in October, if police had intelligence of a threat to that event.

The event attracted ugly protests in Melbourne two years ago, with police saying they were pelted with rocks, cans and horse manure.

Defence Industries Minister Paul Papalia said he expected the defence expo to attract around 20,000 attendees, including senior military officials from around the world.

Protesters accused police of using excessive force, including capsicum spray and stun grenades.

More police powers

The state government yesterday introduced a bill into parliament to empower police to search people and vehicles without the need to suspect an offence was being, or was about to be, committed within an area around the event.

The police commissioner would also be empowered to create a list of people who would be banned from the area, although they would not be notified of that fact in advance.

"We hope we get through Land Forces without any problems whatsoever and not using a single power in that act, because ordinarily everyone in Western Australia has been extremely well behaved when we have these protests," Commissioner Blanch said.

"What we don't want is people coming from other jurisdictions thinking that they can behave the way they have over in Victoria."

The commissioner said police had intelligence that interstate protesters were planning to attend.

He said he was unable to say how much the live facial recognition technology would cost, or which company was involved, because it was only being trialled.

Greens MP Brad Pettitt described the extra police powers and the real-time facial recognition cameras as "overreach" and a "deeply concerning development from the most authoritarian Labor government we have ever seen."

Qué observar

Perspectiva de IA — posibilidades, no hechos

  • Potential expansion of facial recognition technology to other Australian states.

    Posible · Medio plazo

  • Increased debate and potential legal challenges regarding police surveillance powers.

    Probable · Corto plazo

Preguntas abiertas

  • Cost of the live facial recognition technology?
  • Company involved in the trial?
  • Future use of covert technology?

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This article was originally published by ABC Top Stories.

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