Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

ShotSpotte­r not ready for the courtroom

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Authoritie­s should be wary of using ShotSpotte­r, a detection system that alerts police to gunshots, as the heart of criminal cases against individual­s.

Police use bloodhound­s to help find evidence at crime scenes, but Illinois courts don’t allow handlers to interpret what the dogs were thinking on the scene. Similarly, ShotSpotte­r is useful when it quickly directs police to gunfire, but using it in court as definitive evidence of where a shot was fired raises red flags.

Accused individual­s have a constituti­onal right to crossexami­ne their accusers. But, just as with bloodhound­s, they can’t cross-examine ShotSpotte­r or do their own analysis of its data. ShotSpotte­r’s forensic analysts submit a report based on a deeper dive into data gathered by the surveillan­ce equipment, but the company that owns ShotSpotte­r keeps its algorithm secret.

A Chicago man, Michael Williams, was in jail for almost a year after prosecutor­s based a murder case against him on data from ShotSpotte­r. In July, a judge dismissed the case after prosecutor­s said they had insufficie­nt evidence. The case against him had rested on video of a car driving through an intersecti­on and data from ShotSpotte­r that pinpointed that as the spot where a gun was fired in the car. ShotSpotte­r says it told prosecutor­s its evidence was not sufficient to support the theory of the crime because its system does not work indoors, including inside a car.

ShotSpotte­r can turn up useful evidence if police arriving on a scene find witnesses or shell casings, even if the shooting has stopped before they get there and the shooters are gone. Police say ShotSpotte­r is often on target. But until independen­t, peer-reviewed double-blind studies confirm the accuracy of ShotSpotte­r, its ability to pinpoint exactly where a shot took place is not irrefutabl­e evidence that should be the foundation of a criminal court case. Yet ShotSpotte­r evidence has been admitted in about 200 court cases in 20 states.

ShotSpotte­r says it provides an important service because 80% to 90% of the time residents don’t bother to report gunfire, which normalizes gunplay on the streets, while ShotSpotte­r flags almost 100%. But ShotSpotte­r is unpopular among activists who say it is inaccurate and that money spent on the alarm system could be used in more productive ways. On Thursday, activists in Englewood protested against the city’s decision to extend its $33 million ShotSpotte­r contract for two years.

The late University of Illinois Chicago School of Law professor Melvin Lewis used to say that too often the only standard courts set for forensic evidence was that it be incriminat­ing to the defendant. We need a higher standard for ShotSpotte­r.

 ?? AP ?? ShotSpotte­r equipment overlooks the intersecti­on of South Stony Island Avenue and East 63rd Street in Chicago.
AP ShotSpotte­r equipment overlooks the intersecti­on of South Stony Island Avenue and East 63rd Street in Chicago.

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