TechLife News

AI IN THE COURT: WHEN ALGORITHMS RULE ON JAIL TIME

The centuries-old process of releasing defendants on bail, long the province of judicial discretion, is getting a major assist ... courtesy of artificial intelligence.

In late August, Hercules Shepherd Jr. walked up to the stand in a Cleveland courtroom, dressed in an orange jumpsuit. Two nights earlier, an officer had arrested him at a traffic stop with a small bag of cocaine, and he was about to be arraigned.

Judge Jimmy Jackson Jr. looked at Shepherd, then down at a computer-generated score on the front of the 18-year-old’s case file. Two out of six for likelihood of committing another crime. One out of six for likelihood of skipping court. The scores marked Shepherd as a prime candidate for pretrial release with low bail.

“We ask the court to take that all into consideration,” said Shepherd’s public defender, David Magee.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from TechLife News

TechLife News1 min read
Techlife News
TechLifeNewsMagazine.com SOCIAL NETWORKS X.com @Techlife_News x.com/#!/Techlife_News Facebook facebook.com/TechlifeNews SUBSCRIPTIONS TechLife News Website techlifenewsmagazine.com iTunes App Store™ / Newsstand itunes.apple.com/app/te
TechLife News3 min read
Netflix Now Has Nearly 270 Million Subscribers After Another Strong Showing To Begin 2024
Netflix gained another 9.3 million subscribers to start the year while its profit soared with the help of a still-emerging expansion into advertising, but caught investors off guard with a change that will make it more difficult to track the video st
TechLife News4 min readIntelligence (AI) & Semantics
INSIDER Q&A: TRUST AND SAFETY EXEC TALKS ABOUT AI AND CONTENT MODERATION
Alex Popken was a longtime trust and safety executive at Twitter focusing on content moderation before leaving in 2023. She was the first employee there dedicated to moderating Twitter’s advertising business when she started in 2013. Now, she’s vice

Related Books & Audiobooks