It was a hot July day last summer. Detroit teen Lamya Robinson wanted to go roller skating with friends. Her mom dropped her off at the skating rink. But when Lamya tried to enter, she was stopped at the door. The security guards said she had gotten into a fight there in March. They wouldn’t let her in.
Lamya was shocked.
“I was like, that was not me,” she said. “I was so confused because I’d never been there before.”
The guards at the rink didn’t believe her. On the way in, a camera had snapped a picture of Lamya. A computer matched her image with the girl who’d been caught fighting. Lamya had no choice. She had to turn around and go home.
It was a hot day last July. Detroit teen Lamya Robinson wanted to go roller skating with friends. Her mom drove her to the rink. But Lamya was stopped at the door. The security guards said she had been in a fight there. They wouldn’t let her in.
Lamya was shocked.
“That was not me,” she said. “I’d never been there before.”
The guards didn’t believe her. On the way in, a camera had taken her photo. A computer matched her image with the girl who’d been caught fighting.
Lamya had no choice. She had to leave.
On a hot July day last summer, Lamya Robinson wanted to go roller skating with her friends. Her mom dropped her off at the skating rink, but when Lamya, who lives in Detroit, tried to get in, security guards stopped her at the door. They said she had gotten into a fight there in March, and they wouldn’t let her in.
Lamya was shocked.
“I was like, that was not me,” she later recalled. “I was so confused because I’d never been there before.”
The security guards didn’t believe her. A camera had snapped a picture of Lamya as she had tried to enter the skating rink. A computer then matched her image with the girl who’d been caught fighting. Lamya had no choice but to go home.