Police in North Dakota used AI to put an innocent elderly woman in jail. Angela Lipps was seized for a crime she didn’t have anything to do with, then detained unjustly for months destroying her life.
She was babysitting four children on July 14 when a team of U.S. Marshals arrested her at gunpoint. She was booked into her local county jail as a fugitive from justice in North Dakota. But Lipps says she had never been to North Dakota…
How?
A surveillance photo was injected into AI and apparently Fargo police believed an unreliable, untrustworthy machine output would be easier for them to arrest someone with than doing basic detective work.
Every news story about this case is saying “facial recognition software” is to blame. None of them will admit a vendor, let alone a model. The widespread silence is very suspicious.
Fargo Police Chief Dave Zibolski announced his sudden retirement the same week the story broke. Back in September 2025 he told InForum that his department “does not have facial recognition technology”. He then went on to say they rely on “local, state and federal partners that may use this technology in assisting FPD with our investigations.”
Ok Zibolski. Big clue.
That statement came months after the April-May 2025 investigation that used facial recognition to charge Lipps with eight felonies. Months after his detectives signed an affidavit of probable cause built on a bullshit piece of software claiming a match.
Telling the truth, technically, has become exactly the problem with the AI adherents. They are expressing loyalty to their church, even when it means the denial of basic reality.
State Systems Aren’t a Match
North Dakota has a facial recognition photo repository operated by the Bureau of Criminal Investigation under the Attorney General’s office. A 2017 FBI Memorandum of Understanding, published by the House Oversight Committee, describes the contents: mugshots, corrections photos, and North Dakota state driver’s license photos. The system exists to compare probe photos against that state-based repository.
Angela Lipps is from Tennessee. See the obvious problem?
She has no criminal record in North Dakota. She has never held a North Dakota driver’s license. Her face is not in that database. The state system physically cannot return her as a match.
So we know Fargo police used something outside the BCI repository.
Breadcrumbs in Court Documents
According to records obtained by WDAY through an open records request, Fargo police ran surveillance images through facial recognition software that returned Angela Lipps as the match. The detective used Lipps’ social media accounts and her Tennessee driver’s license photo as the finding. The charging document states that she appeared to be the suspect based on facial features, body type, hairstyle and hair color.
Two details matter a lot here. First, the software confidently matched a surveillance image from a Fargo bank to a woman in Tennessee with no North Dakota connections and no criminal history. That confidence is completely unfounded. Second, the detective went to her social media profiles immediately after receiving the match. He went there because the software pointed him there. I know that move, and it has a specific behavioral signature.
The Evidence Table
When I think about the commercial facial recognition product that matches surveillance images against a database of billions of internet-scraped photos and returns links to social media profiles where matching images were found… I get a clear view.
…a US company that scrapes the internet and adds all of the faces it can find in photos and videos to its database. It claims to have collected more than 60 billion photos.
| Evidence | What It Shows | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Lipps has no ND criminal record, no ND driver’s license, has never been to North Dakota | ND BCI’s facial recognition repository (mugshots, corrections photos, ND driver’s license photos) cannot contain her image. The match came from a system with access to non-government photo databases. | FBI-BCI MOU (House Oversight, 2017); WDAY/InForum |
| Detective reviewed Lipps’ social media accounts immediately after the FR match | The software returned social media links as part of the match output. Clearview AI’s specific product returns the source URLs of social media profiles and news sites where matching images were found. No state or federal mugshot-based FR system does this. | Fargo police file obtained by WDAY via open records request |
| The same software flagged Lipps in both a Fargo case and a West Fargo case | Both departments accessed the same tool. This suggests a shared subscription, shared state-level access, or the same commercial product purchased independently. | InForum, March 13, 2026 |
| West Fargo Police used Clearview AI in free trials (confirmed 2021) | West Fargo is a documented Clearview user. If the “same software” returned the same match for both Fargo and West Fargo, the simplest explanation is both used Clearview. | Valley News Live, April 2021; BuzzFeed News |
| North Dakota BCI was identified as a Clearview AI user (2021) | The BCI, the “state partner” Zibolski referenced, refused to confirm or deny use, saying it would not comment on investigation tactics. | Valley News Live, April 2021; BuzzFeed News |
| Bismarck Police and Devils Lake Police also used Clearview AI | Clearview AI was circulating widely through North Dakota law enforcement by 2020-2021, via free trials marketed directly to individual officers. | Valley News Live, April 2021; BuzzFeed News |
| Dilworth PD (6 miles from Fargo) signed a three-year Clearview AI contract in September 2025 | Clearview was actively marketing in the Fargo metro during the exact period of the Lipps investigation. The company “pitched its facial recognition software” directly to Dilworth. | InForum, September 2025 |
| Zibolski said Fargo PD “does not have facial recognition technology” but uses “partners” | This is the standard distancing language used by agencies that access Clearview through individual officer accounts or partner agencies. The NYPD used identical framing — no “institutional relationship” while individual officers ran thousands of searches. | InForum, September 2025; BuzzFeed News |
| Clearview offered free trials to individual officers, often without departmental knowledge | Agencies nationwide were caught unaware that their officers had signed up. BuzzFeed identified 34 organizations where officials didn’t know employees were using Clearview until reporters asked. This is the mechanism that lets a chief truthfully say his department “does not have” the technology. | BuzzFeed News, April 2021 |
| No regulation, no tracking in North Dakota | The ACLU of North Dakota confirmed there is no pending legislation on AI in police investigations. The ND Commission on Legal Counsel for Indigents confirmed how often AI is used in criminal cases is “unknown because it is not tracked.” The FR algorithms are proprietary and cannot be cross-examined. | InForum, March 14, 2026 |
We’ve Seen This Before
The closest documented precedent is the Randal Quran Reid case. In November 2022, Reid was pulled over in Georgia and arrested for stealing designer handbags in Louisiana — a state he had never visited. The arrest warrant was based on a Clearview AI facial recognition match. Facial recognition was never mentioned in the warrant documents. Reid spent six days in jail and thousands on legal fees before the case collapsed. The charges came from Jefferson Parish, Louisiana, which used Clearview directly.
Lipps and Reid share the same architecture: a Clearview match on a person who has never been to the jurisdiction, arrest across state lines, no corroborating investigation before charges, and no mention of the specific technology in court filings. The difference is duration. Reid was out in six days. Lipps was held for 163.
Where the Name Will Come From
Lipps is working with two lawyers, including one based in Minneapolis, on a civil lawsuit. Discovery in that case will force disclosure of the vendor, the contract or access agreement, the search logs, and the match confidence score. The Cass County State’s Attorney’s office has refused to answer whether AI facial recognition alone is sufficient to establish probable cause. Fargo’s mayor declined to answer whether the police chief’s sudden retirement was related to the case.
The name is already visible in the negative space. A state mugshot database cannot match a person who isn’t in it. A system that returns social media profiles as output is a system that scraped them as input. Four agencies in the immediate region are documented Clearview users. Two of them — West Fargo and the BCI — are the exact “local and state partners” the chief named as his department’s access point.
Every question about this case converges on the same answer. The only people who won’t say it out loud are the ones who signed the affidavit.








The German education system has an answer to this. The Ausbildung system treats craft mastery as a legitimate intellectual achievement, not a consolation prize for people who didn’t make it to university. A Meister has a protected title, a defined body of knowledge, and social standing that reflects actual competence. The system assumes society needs people who understand the substrate, and builds institutions to produce them.