In June 2026, Derbyshire Police in England officially launched a criminal investigation. The person under investigation is an active-duty police officer, accused of using an AI system to create "evidential material" in "several different cases." Derbyshire Police stated, "A police officer is accused of using AI to fabricate false evidence and bringing that material into criminal proceedings."
The police officer has been reassigned from frontline duty but has not yet been named or arrested. According to Sky News , this case is considered the first of its kind in the history of the UK criminal justice system.
The threshold for fabricating evidence has been changed to a single line of prompts.
Generative AI is making rapid progress in the generation quality of images, videos, audio, and text. You don't need to be a technical expert or have expensive equipment. You just need to know how to give instructions to get a piece of "evidence" that is difficult to distinguish from real material in just a few minutes.
In contrast to traditional methods of forging physical evidence, such as altering crime scenes or replacing samples, these methods have relatively mature anti-counterfeiting mechanisms in terms of technology and systems. However, with the current capabilities of AI-generated digital materials—a dialogue record, a photograph, or a file—it is almost impossible to tell from the appearance that they come from a generated model or the real world.
Furthermore, the police stated that it involved "several different cases," which suggests that it was not an isolated incident of impulsive behavior by the officer, but rather a systematic operation spanning multiple cases.
The judicial system needs to be repriced.
The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) has intervened and stated that it is proactively contacting defense lawyers and courts to assess which ongoing trials may need to be overturned or reopened due to this contaminated evidence.
This statement carries far more weight than it initially appears. It means that innocent defendants may already be prosecuted or even convicted due to evidence fabricated by AI. The more serious the case, the greater the harm suffered by the defendant due to false evidence. What CPS is now doing is essentially a reverse audit.
The criminal justice system's trust in "digital evidence" rests on a nearly unspoken assumption: that law enforcement officers themselves would not fabricate evidence, or that fabrication would be so rare as to be excluded by the system. This assumption has now been exposed. And by insiders within the system, rendering all external verification mechanisms (defense lawyers, judges, juries) obsolete.
The judicial system's standards for accepting digital evidence were never designed for an era of "massive dissemination of AI-generated content." Verification mechanisms, post-analysis, and forensic programs are still based on the assumption that "forgery is the exception." When the cost of forgery approaches zero, the effectiveness of these mechanisms needs to be re-evaluated.
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