Maine Agency Apologizes for Using AI to Edit Evidence Photo Posted on Facebook
"Unbeknownst to anyone, when the app added the patch, it altered the packaging and some of the other attributes on the photograph. None of us caught it or realized it,” the Westbrook PD said.
by Staff
July 2, 2025
This combination of the two images side by side was posted on Facebook by the Westbrook PD. The image on the left is the original photo. The image on the right is the photo edited using ChatGPT.
Credit:
Westbrook PD/Facebook
1 min to read
A Maine police department is being criticized for reportedly using an artificial intelligence tool to edit a photo that was posted on social media of evidence seized during a drug operation.
The original photo of the drug evidence.
Credit:
Westbrook PD/Facebook
The Westbrook Police Department said in a Facebook statement that the officer used “a photoshop app” to add the agency’s patch into the original image. An agency spokesperson told local media that the tool used to edit the photo was the artificial intelligence product ChatGPT.
Ad Loading...
When the edited photo was posted on Facebook, viewers realized that it was AI.
Image of the drug evidence seized by the Westbrook Police that has been edited with ChatGPT.
Credit:
Westbrook PD/Facebook
The Westbrook PD explained the incident in a Facebook statement. “Unbeknownst to anyone, when the app added the patch, it altered the packaging and some of the other attributes on the photograph. None of us caught it or realized it,” the statement says.
Westbrook PD concluded its statement with an apology and said it had learned a “valuable lesson” from the public’s response to the edited image.
The apology includes this statement. “We apologize for this oversight. It was never our intent to alter the image of the evidence. We never realized that using a photoshop app to add our logo would alter a photograph so substantially.”
Watch expanded coverage of IACP 2025 as the POLICE Magazine team walks the aisles at the expo and shares what we found interesting on display for chiefs from across the country and around the world this week in Denver, Colorado.
Take a look inside the expo at IACP 2025 to see a sampling of what is displayed for chiefs from across the country and around the world this week in Denver, Colorado.
Pro-gard has introduced HD Fender and Headlight Wraps for added front-end protection and a new P1300 Pro-Cell transport system for Ford F-150 and Super Duty models.
Free officer-wellness training comes to Las Vegas Sept. 22–25: The Wounded Blue’s 5th Annual National Law Enforcement Survival Summit opens registration.
When floodwaters overturned a vehicle in rural New Mexico, Officer Walker Eby risked his life—crawling over raging currents on a ladder—to rescue a woman, her child, and their dog.
The memorandum says D.C. is a Federal city and violent crime “prevents Federal workers from safely performing their duties and prevents Americans from safely accessing their elected officials.”
Chief Darin Schierbaum said the new uniforms are made of a lightweight fabric with four-way stretch, UV protection, and ventilation to make officers more comfortable in the Atlanta heat.