Inside the secret AI program using fake personas to target suspects
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Apr 21, 2025
Overwatch is an AI tool that creates hyper-realistic digital personas to infiltrate digital spaces to interact with suspected criminals.
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Remember Tom Cruise in Minority Report? He plays a cop using futuristic tech to arrest people
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before they commit a crime. That kind of pre-crime policing might not be science fiction for much
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longer. In fact, it's already being quietly tested in parts of the U.S. It's not quite
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precognition, but a highly secretive AI tool called Overwatch. It's now being used by law
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enforcement. The system claims it can detect and disrupt criminal activity across many verticals
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including border security, school safety, and human trafficking. What makes Overwatch unique isn't just about how it yzes data
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but how it inserts itself into conversations. Overwatch uses AI to create fake, hyper-realistic, virtual undercover agents
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digital personas that infiltrate social media, texting platforms, and even encrypted apps like Signal
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These bots pose as college protesters, activists, or even teenagers and interact directly with suspected criminals
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The goal? Build relationships with targets, gather intelligence, and help real officers make arrests
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Examples from internal company presentations obtained by 404 Media include a 36 divorced woman interested in activism a 14 boy designed to bait child traffickers and a 25 honeypot persona a woman of Yemeni descent from Dearborn Michigan who even speaks a specific regional
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dialect of Arabic. The tool was developed by a private New York-based company called
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Massive Blue, and police departments are already deploying these deep-cover virtual agents
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in live operations. Pinal County, Arizona officials reportedly paid hundreds of thousands of dollars
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to run 50 Overwatch personas as part of its ongoing investigations. The county is paying for the contract with an anti-human trafficking grant
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from the Arizona Department of Public Safety. However, in Arizona's Yuma County, a 2023 $10,000 contract with Massive Blue was not renewed
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According to a county spokesman, quote, the tech did not meet department needs
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So far, the results are unclear. There are no confirmed arrests linked to Overwatch
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watch, and critics say there's little transparency about how the system works or if it works at all
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Some of the targets include vaguely defined protesters, not just suspected criminals
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And that's raising serious concerns about surveillance overreach, civil liberties, and potential threats to First Amendment rights
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For Straight Arrow News, I'm Lauren Keenan. For more on this story, download the Straight Arrow News app or visit san.com
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