Phase pilote : CAIM est en construction. Les fiches sont provisoires, basées sur des sources publiques, et n’ont pas encore été révisées par des pairs. Commentaires bienvenus.
Confirmé Important

Les polices régionales de York et de Peel ont conjointement déployé la reconnaissance faciale d'IDEMIA en mai 2024, suivies par la police régionale de Halton en décembre 2025. Les trois services partagent une base de données de 1,6 million de photos signalétiques; ils indiquent que les correspondances sont traitées comme des pistes d'enquête vérifiées par des analystes formés. Des organismes de libertés civiles ont demandé un moratoire sur la reconnaissance faciale policière au Canada.

Survenu: 27 mai 2024 Signalé: 27 mai 2024

On May 27, 2024, York Regional Police (YRP) and Peel Regional Police (PRP) jointly deployed IDEMIA facial recognition technology through a shared procurement partnership (CBC News, 2024; York Regional Police, 2024). The system allows officers to compare images of suspects or persons of interest against a shared mugshot database containing booking photos held by both services (CBC News, 2024; York Regional Police, 2024). IDEMIA, a French multinational biometrics company, was selected as the vendor.

In February 2025, Halton Regional Police Service awarded IDEMIA a $1.18 million, five-year contract ($362,764 for installation and first-year maintenance; $180,643 per year thereafter) (Biometric Update, 2025). The system went live for Halton in December 2025, expanding the shared database to approximately 1.6 million mugshots and tattoo images across all three services (Biometric Update, 2025).

The system automates what was previously a manual image comparison process. Officers submit images of suspects, which the IDEMIA software compares against the shared mugshot database using neural network-based facial recognition. All potential matches are treated as investigative leads — not confirmations of identity — and must be reviewed by trained facial recognition analysts (York Regional Police, 2024). The services state the system is not used for real-time surveillance, live video analysis, crowd monitoring, or scraping internet or social media images (York Regional Police, 2024).

The deployment was informed by guidance published by the Information and Privacy Commissioner of Ontario (IPC) in January 2024, titled "Facial Recognition and Mugshot Databases: Guidance for Police in Ontario." The IPC guidance states that police must ensure lawful authority before deploying facial recognition, conduct Privacy Impact Assessments, limit use to serious crimes, regularly purge non-conviction records from mugshot databases, and maintain public transparency through regular audits and public reporting (Information and Privacy Commissioner of Ontario, 2024). Both York and Peel stated they consulted with the IPC during implementation (CBC News, 2024). Peel Regional Police published a PIA summary document.

The Canadian Civil Liberties Association raised strong objections (Canadian Civil Liberties Association, 2024). Director of fundamental freedoms Anaïs Bussières McNicoll stated: "Until there are clear and transparent policies and laws regulating the use of facial recognition technology in Canada, it should not be used by law enforcement agencies." Brenda McPhail, former director of the CCLA's Privacy, Technology and Surveillance Program, has stated that facial recognition technology "facilitates mass surveillance, is harmful to privacy, is also racially biased and feeds systemic racism in policing" (Canadian Civil Liberties Association, 2024).

CBC News reported in June 2024 that Nijeer Parks, a Black man in New Jersey, spent 10 days wrongfully jailed in 2019 after an alleged misidentification by IDEMIA facial recognition technology — the same vendor now deployed by York and Peel police (CBC News, 2024). According to the lawsuit filed by Parks, he was arrested for shoplifting and assault based on a false facial recognition match (CBC News, 2024). The charges were eventually dropped. This case received significant media attention in Ontario and raised questions about racial bias in the system now being used by Canadian police (CBC News, 2024).

Separately, Toronto Police Service published a request for proposals in December 2024 to upgrade its own existing facial recognition system (CBC News, 2024). Eleven vendors expressed interest, including IDEMIA, NEC Corporation of America, and Facia AI Ltd. The solicitation closed February 14, 2025.

Matérialisé à partir de

Préjudices

Trois services de police régionaux de l'Ontario ont constitué une base de données partagée de reconnaissance faciale de 1,6 million de photos signalétiques, déployant une correspondance biométrique basée sur les réseaux neuronaux sans législation fédérale encadrant de tels systèmes. La même technologie IDEMIA a été liée à l'arrestation injuste et l'emprisonnement de 10 jours d'un homme noir au New Jersey.

Vie privée et donnéesSurveillance disproportionnéeDiscrimination et droitsImportantPopulation

La technologie de reconnaissance faciale présente des biais documentés selon la race, le sexe et l'âge dans les taux de précision, comme l'ont établi les évaluations du NIST et la recherche indépendante. Des organisations de libertés civiles ont soulevé des préoccupations selon lesquelles le déploiement d'une base de données partagée entre trois services policiers pourrait entraîner des erreurs d'identification discriminatoires touchant les communautés racisées en Ontario.

Vie privée et donnéesSurveillance disproportionnéeDiscrimination et droitsModéréPopulation

Preuves

8 rapports

  1. Média — CBC News (27 mai 2024)

    York and Peel Regional Police jointly deployed IDEMIA facial recognition through shared procurement; system compares suspect images against shared mugshot database

  2. Officiel — Information and Privacy Commissioner of Ontario (1 janv. 2024)

    IPC Ontario guidance on police use of facial recognition and mugshot databases; governance framework and privacy requirements

  3. Officiel — Canadian Civil Liberties Association (1 janv. 2024)

    CCLA position on facial recognition technology; civil liberties concerns with police biometric surveillance

  4. Officiel — York Regional Police (27 mai 2024)

    York Regional Police public information on facial recognition technology deployment; stated policies and limitations

  5. Média — CBC News (15 juin 2024)

    IDEMIA linked to wrongful arrests in the United States; concerns about accuracy and racial bias in the technology deployed by Toronto-area police

  6. Média — CBC News (10 juill. 2024)

    Broader reporting on facial recognition adoption by Canadian police forces; context on national trends and privacy concerns

  7. Média — Biometric Update (15 févr. 2025)

    Canadian police expanding use of IDEMIA facial recognition; technical details of the shared database system

  8. Média — Biometric Update (15 déc. 2025)

    IDEMIA system going live for Canadian regional police; 1.6 million image database; Durham Regional Police joining shared system

Détails de la fiche

Réponses et résultats

Commissaire à l'information et à la protection de la vie privée de l'OntarioguidanceComplétéInconnu

Published guidance on facial recognition and mugshot databases for Ontario police, setting out requirements for lawful authority, PIAs, serious crime limitation, mugshot purging, and public transparency

Guidance-level only — no binding legal framework. York and Peel stated they consulted with IPC during implementation.

Évaluation éditoriale évalué

Ce déploiement représente la normalisation discrète de la reconnaissance faciale policière au Canada par expansion progressive. Trois services de police régionaux de l'Ontario partagent maintenant une base de données de 1,6 million d'images (Biometric Update, 2025), et Toronto est en processus d'approvisionnement pour son propre système (CBC News, 2024). Chaque expansion se produit dans un cadre de recommandations — et non de lois contraignantes — dans une juridiction sans loi fédérale sur l'IA (Information and Privacy Commissioner of Ontario, 2024).

Entités impliquées

Systèmes d'IA impliqués

IDEMIA Facial Recognition System

Système de reconnaissance faciale basé sur les réseaux neuronaux qui compare les images de suspects contre une base de données partagée de 1,6 million de photos signalétiques et images de tatouages des polices régionales de York, Peel et Halton

Fiches connexes

Taxonomieévalué

Domaine
Application de la loi
Type de préjudice
Vie privée et donnéesSurveillance disproportionnéeDiscrimination et droits
Voie de contribution de l'IA
Contexte de déploiementSupervision absente
Phase du cycle de vie
DéploiementSurveillance

Historique des modifications

Historique des modifications
VersionDateModification
v110 mars 2026Record created from public sources. Agent-draft — requires editorial review before publication.
v211 mars 2026Neutrality and factuality review: corrected Brenda McPhail's title in FR (was 'chercheuse en vie privée', should be 'ancienne directrice du Programme de vie privée, technologie et surveillance de l'ACLC'); specified IPC guidance date as January 2024 in EN; qualified Nijeer Parks/IDEMIA link as coming from lawsuit allegations; reframed harm #2 to attribute bias concerns to NIST research and civil liberties organizations rather than presenting as editorial assertion.

Version 2