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​By SCM REPORTER

LONDON – ​A PREDATORY child sex offender who tried to dodge justice has been hauled before the courts—after being snared by the Met’s high-tech “Robocop” facial recognition cameras.

​Mohamed Patel, 61, thought he could disappear after skipping a court date last summer for the sick grooming of a 12-year-old girl. But the pervert’s luck ran out when he walked past a police surveillance van parked on a busy East London high street.

​The Live Facial Recognition (LFR) tech—which scans crowds and compares faces against a “most wanted” list—instantly flagged Patel as he strolled through Dalston in December.

​​Plain-clothes officers pounced on Patel in Kingsland High Street seconds after the computer gave the “red alert.”

​The arrest brought an end to a manhunt that began when Patel failed to show up at Highbury Corner Magistrates’ Court in June 2025. He had been charged with attempting to meet a girl under 16 and engaging in sexual communication with a child.

​The court heard how Patel targeted his victim, a girl of just 12, in an online chatroom.

The creep quizzed the youngster on what she wore and made a string of explicit sexual comments before travelling to meet her.
​Luckily, instead of a child, he was met by Met officers who had been tracking his digital footprint.

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​’Despite his attempt to go to ground, Patel appeared at Wood Green Crown Court on Monday.

He was handed a 12-month prison sentence, suspended for a year, and slapped on the Sex Offenders Register for a decade.

​Met bigwigs today hailed the technology as a “game-changer” for cleaning up London’s streets.

​Lindsey Chiswick, the Met’s lead for facial recognition, said:

“Without it, Patel could have continued to evade police and cause further harm to other victims. LFR is a powerful tool which is helping us to catch dangerous individuals and deliver justice.”

​The Met confirmed that since the start of 2024, the sci-fi tech has helped bag more than 1,700 offenders, including rapists and violent thugs.

​The force moved to reassure the public that the cameras aren’t “spying” on law-abiding Londoners. They insisted that the biometric data of anyone not on a watchlist is “immediately and permanently deleted” as they walk past.

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