Can Super Recognisers Solve one of the Most Famous Crime Mysteries of all Time??

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The Untold Truth About the Escape From Alcatraz

In 1962, three men, Frank Morris and the Anglin brothers, made a daring and well planned escape from the Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary.   The maximum security jail was located on an island in San Francisco Bay and housed some of America's most infamous criminals.  According to the official FBI report, the men died in the attempt to flee the maximum security prison, most likely drowning before reaching mainland California.   But did the authorities cover up the truth, as they wanted the public (and criminals) to believe that no one could escape from Alcatraz? You can also see how they escaped in the Clint Eastwood film Escape from Alcatraz.

At 10 mins 45 secs - 56 secs - allegedly photographs of John and Clarence Anglin (wearing sun glasses) taken in Brazil in 1975, thirteen years after the escape.   Their prison mugshots are shown alongside.   What is your view?  Are they the same men??   Did the escapees make it to the mainland?

Covid-19 Virus

This is a difficult time for many and our chairman, Lord Lingfield, hopes that all members of the Association and their families get through this period.   Many of the events where Super Recognisers were to be deployed are either cancelled or under threat - this includes Premier League football matches, horse show events and Wimbledon Tennis.   Please continue to push your local police forces to use Super Recognisers and once this current threat has been removed from our lives, we can continue to promote the use of SRs throughout the world.

Please note the earlier news item, which stated that the Association Presentation Day is now to be held in London on Friday 18th September 2020.

Super Recognisers Praised by Former President of the Chartered Society of Forensic Sciences

In this interview, Professor Martin Evison of Northumbria University and former President of the Chartered Society of Forensic Sciences questions the police use of automated facial recognition systems.  He does, however, have high praise for the use of human Super Recognisers.   It is time for law enforcement to start using the skills of their PEOPLE to spot offenders.  At Super Recognisers International, we can help you to find your Super Recognisers and train them how to use their skill within the law and to best effect.

Super Recognisers needed for TV documentary

A documentary is under consideration by a large broadcasting group.  To show the diversity of Super Recognisers, those from ethnic minorities or disabled groups are sought.   For further information please contact gemma.havard@superrecognisersinternational.com  if you fit this criteria and have interesting Super Recognition skills to relate.  This will be paid work.

German Super Recogniser case hits the news

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Police's super-eye discovers wanted thief

The Stuttgart police have unusual talents – they recognize the faces of people they have seen in search photos. To the displeasure of a fugitive offender. 

The 34-year-old should not have passed the police headquarters at the Pragsattel in the light rail. However, he had no idea that a specialist of the police would board the U-15 train in the direction of Stammheim that late evening. One with a special eye for people. A so-called super-recogniser. 

The fact that the Stuttgart police have about 70 talents, who can memorize faces particularly well and recognize them in any situation, has once again paid off. A 36-year-old traffic route investigator had been working with the traffic police for a long time when he was on a light rail in the north of Stuttgart shortly after 10 p.m. on Thursday. But then everything immediately returned to duty.

Talent search with help from London

A 34-year-old man, whose image was registered in the police search systems, was sitting on the train and had been put out for arrest. The person concerned, who had not begun his sentence for theft, immediately suspected evil when he noticed the eyes of another resting on him. Already at the next stop, at the level of Sieglestraße in Feuerbach, he tried to get up and away – and escape in the darkness of the industrial area of Feuerbach.

Why could he be recognized in the first place? In February 2018, the Stuttgart police had participated in a project in which officers were sought who have a special memory. The facial features can memorize themselves so well within seconds that they would still recognize the affected persons after years in a crowd. The Metropolitan Police in London has had a special unit of such super-re-recognizers for years – and together with a scientist from the University of Greenwich, the Stuttgarters were looking for talent in their own ranks. With success.


The fugitive has a knife with him

In September 2019, for example, a Stuttgart super-recogniser, also in the evening, had tracked down an EC card thief in Zuffenhausen, whom he had met by chance on the sidewalk. And the 34-year-old in the current case had no chance either. "The colleague is a very good runner," said police spokeswoman Monika Ackermann. He sprinted behind the fugitive, several hundred meters to the Magirusstraße. There the man gave up. "He then also released his knife," says spokeswoman Ackermann. The 34-year-old, who is known to police with offences across the Criminal Code, then began his sentence.