Chris Pelkey was killed in 2021 in a road attack in Chandler, Arizona.
Three and a half years later, Pelkey appeared in an Arizona court and spoke to his killer. Something
"For Gabriel Horcasitas, the man who shot me, the shame we encountered each other that day," Pelkey's video recording said. "In another kind of life, we might be friends."
"I believe in forgiveness, a forgiveness God. I always have it, and I still do it." Perki continued, wearing a gray baseball cap and the thick red and brown beard he wore in his life.
Pelkey is 37 years old, a devout religion and a military veteran fighting veteran. After Pelkey left the vehicle and walked towards Horcasitas's car, Horcasitas fired at a red light in 2021.
Artificial intelligence makes it possible for Pelkey to look from outside the grave, which may be the first time AI is used to issue a victim impact statement. Pelkey's sister Stacey Wales told local exports ABC-15 that she often considers when collecting over 40 influence statements from Chris' family and friends.
"What I've been back all the time is just what Chris says?" Wales said.
As AI spreads in society and enters court, the U.S. Judicial Conference Advisory Committee announced that it will begin seeking public comments to determine how to regulate the use of AI-based evidence at trial.
Wales and her husband fed an AI model video and Pelkey audio to try to come up with a rendering that would match the emotions and ideas of the still alive pelkey, which is Wales with local exports of Fox 10.
Judge Todd Lang responded positively to the use of AI. Lang was eventually sentenced to 10 and half a year in prison for manslaughter.
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"I love AI, thank you. Being angry like you, being angry like family, I hear forgiveness." "I think that's true."
Pelkey’s brother John also agreed, saying he felt “recovered” from seeing his brother’s face and believed Chris would forgive his killer.
“That’s someone I know,” John said.