Chicago Sun-Times

Activists slam city for ShotSpotte­r extension

- BY TOM SCHUBA, STAFF REPORTER tschuba@suntimes.com | @TomSchuba

Activists gathered near the Englewood police district Thursday to decry the city’s decision to extend its contract with ShotSpotte­r, the company behind an acoustic gunshot detection system that has recently come under heavy fire for allegedly being inaccurate.

The city’s three-year, $33 million contract with the Silicon Valley-based startup was initially supposed to expire Thursday. But Cathy Kwiatkowsk­i, a spokeswoma­n for the city’s Department of Procuremen­t Services, said the deal was extended for two additional years at the request of the Chicago Police Department, which uses the software to respond to alerts of gunfire.

Tynetta Hill-Muhammad, of BYP100 and Defund CPD, claimed to reporters the contract was stretched out “under the cover of night,” without any public comment or notificati­on to members of City Council. The few dozen demonstrat­ors ultimately called on the city to immediatel­y end the contract and instead invest in communitie­s the technology has been used to monitor, like Englewood.

“We know that the solution is not policing. It is not hyper-surveillan­ce,” Hill-Muhammad said. “We are here because we know that the solution is an investment in life-affirming institutio­ns and resources that will reduce instances of violence and allow people to pursue the fullness of life.”

The demonstrat­ion came just hours after the Associated Press published an investigat­ion raising serious alarms about ShotSpotte­r’s technology, the latest in a series of news reports and studies that have challenged its efficacy.

Though its system is closely guarded as a trade secret, ShotSpotte­r has claimed it’s 97% accurate. The AP investigat­ion found the system could miss shots or wrongly detect other sounds and concluded there were serious issues with using the technology as evidence.

As with another report published in July by Vice, the AP investigat­ion said that ShotSpotte­r employees have altered both the location of an alert and the number of gunshots detected. The AP also reported that dispatcher­s and police officials have previously been able to make some of those alteration­s.

In a statement, a spokespers­on for ShotSpotte­r said its technology is an “integral component to Chicago’s comprehens­ive efforts to reduce gun violence” while apparently pushing back on the recent reports.

“Allegation­s of evidence tampering are outrageous lies and undermine the important work that our dedicated team members undertake to help combat gun violence,” the spokespers­on said in a statement.

A police spokesman stood firmly behind the software.

“In order to reduce gun violence, knowing where it occurs is crucial,” spokesman Tom Ahern said in a statement. “ShotSpotte­r has detected hundreds of shootings that would have otherwise gone unreported.”

The CPD’s use of ShotSpotte­r came under increased scrutiny after the death of 13-yearold Adam Toledo, who was shot and killed in March by a Chicago police officer responding to an alert from the system. Toledo’s hands were empty when the fatal shot was fired, though he was seen on the officer’s body-worn camera holding a pistol a moment earlier.

After referencin­g Toledo’s killing, activist Adwoa Agyepong insisted “no surveillan­ce technology should be used to terrorize the South and West side.”

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/ SUN-TIMES ?? Tynetta HillMuhamm­ad of BYP100 and Defund CPD claimed Thursday that the city’s ShotSpotte­r contract was stretched out “under the cover of night.”
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/ SUN-TIMES Tynetta HillMuhamm­ad of BYP100 and Defund CPD claimed Thursday that the city’s ShotSpotte­r contract was stretched out “under the cover of night.”

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