Portland Police Photoshopped A Black Man’s Mugshot To Make Him Fit Their Suspect’s Profile

Tyrone Lamont Allen
Portland, OR — The Portland Police Department report­ed­ly removed the tat­toos on the face of Tyrone Lamont Allen, a 50-year old Black man, using Photoshop to make him look like the accused sus­pect in a string of bank rob­beries in April 2017. 

Portland police sus­pect­ed Allen, who has tat­toos cov­er­ing his fore­head and cheeks, was involved in bank rob­beries. However, sur­veil­lance footage of the crime shows the actu­al rob­ber has no face tat­toos. None of the tellers who wit­nessed the inci­dent described the rob­ber with face tat­toos as well. Still, Allen was charged in con­nec­tion to the rob­bery. Investigators alleged­ly altered his mug shot using Photoshop, then pre­sent­ed it to the tellers with­out let­ting them know that it was altered. Some of the tellers picked Allen out of the pho­to array of five sim­i­lar-look­ing men and iden­ti­fied him as the robber.

What the police did has since caused out­rage, with some say­ing the police pho­to­shopped an inno­cent man’s face so they could just imme­di­ate­ly make an arrest with­out exert­ing much effort. The police offi­cers involved have yet to face any con­se­quence. It is also yet to be deter­mined if Allen’s rights were vio­lat­ed and if the pho­to­shopped evi­dence would be accept­ed in court. However, police offi­cers claimed that Allen could have actu­al­ly put on a make­up pri­or to rob­bing banks so they dig­i­tal­ly cov­ered his face tat­toos to keep the wit­ness­es from being “dis­tract­ed.”

I basi­cal­ly paint­ed over the tat­toos,” police foren­sic crim­i­nal­ist Mark Weber tes­ti­fied. “Almost like apply­ing elec­tron­ic make­up.” Meanwhile, Jules Epstein, a law pro­fes­sor at Temple University and lead­ing nation­al author­i­ty on eye­wit­ness tes­ti­mo­ny, said it is an inap­pro­pri­ate prac­tice. “It’s unbe­liev­able to me that police would ignore the fact that no teller has described a per­son with glar­ing tat­toos and make this man into a pos­si­ble sus­pect by cov­er­ing them up,” he told The Oregonian. “They’re increas­ing the risk of mis­tak­en iden­ti­ty.” https://​www​.black​news​.com/​n​e​w​s​/​p​o​r​t​l​a​n​d​-​p​o​l​i​c​e​-​p​h​o​t​o​s​h​o​p​p​e​d​-​b​l​a​c​k​-​m​a​n​-​t​y​r​o​n​e​-​l​a​m​o​n​t​-​a​l​l​e​n​-​m​u​g​s​h​ot/