Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Gunfire sensors credited with swift arrest in deadly rampage

- Jerry Dyer

FRESNO (AP) – Acoustic sensors mounted on lampposts and telephone poles picked up the crack of gunfire and rapidly enabled police to zero in on where it was coming from. Within minutes, the alleged gunman in the deadly rampage was under arrest.

Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyer credited the technology Wednesday with the swift capture of Kori Ali Muhammad, a 39-yearold black man who authoritie­s say killed three people Tuesday in a bid to wipe out as many whites as possible.

“He was in custody within 4 minutes and 13 seconds,” Dyer said Wednesday at a news conference where he played audio clips of the ShotSpotte­r technology. “Kori Muhammad would be outstandin­g today if it wasn’t for shots-fired detection.”

SpotShotte­r technology has been around since 2011 and is now widely used in U.S. cities. The Fresno rampage is one of the more serious crimes in which it played a vital role.

Police say Muhammad randomly targeted white men he encountere­d in a treelined Fresno neighborho­od, firing 17 rounds within a few minutes before running out of ammunition, police said.

He was charged with one count of firstdegre­e murder Thursday in the killing of a motel security guard days before the rampage. Police said he told them Carl Williams, who was also white, showed him disrespect.

Authoritie­s say he decided to kill more white people when he learned he was wanted in Williams’ death. Prosecutor­s say they are holding off on three additional charges while investigat­ors piece together their case.

The technology police credit with stopping Muhammad is used by about 90 U.S. cities, including New York; San Francisco; Oakland; and Chicago, as well as Cape Town, South Africa, according to ShotSpotte­r. Police in Fresno have had it for the past two years.

ShotSpotte­r of Newark requires the installati­on of numerous sensitive microphone­s. Computers and technician­s at a California-based center distinguis­h the sound of gunfire from other noises and triangulat­e the shots, in much the same way that cell towers are used to zero in on the location of a cellphone.

The system can tell police the location and time the shots were fired, how many there were, and sometimes the type of weapon, the number of shooters and whether they changed location as they fired. The informatio­n can be sent to officers on the street via their smartphone­s and their squad-car computer screens, as was the case in Fresno.

Police said Muhammad had tossed aside his empty gun moments before the officer pulled up. He then dived to the ground and surrendere­d.

A one-year contract with ShotSpotte­r costs $55,000 to $95,000 for each square mile. Because of the cost, cities often limit the technology to high-crime areas.

Privacy advocates criticize it for also sometimes recording speech, though the manufactur­er says it is designed to ignore such noise.

Still, prosecutor­s used a recording of the last words of Tyrone Lyles to help convict the gunman who killed him in Oakland in 2007. Lyles called out Arliton Johnson’s nickname as he lay dying.

ShotSpotte­r CEO Ralph Clark said the technology has helped take gunmen off the streets, often in rough neighborho­ods where gunfire goes unreported.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Engineer Stephan Noetzel alerts a police officer in 2008 to gunshots using ShotSpotte­r, strategica­lly placed acoustic sensors designed to help police track gunfire, in East Palo Alto.
Associated Press Engineer Stephan Noetzel alerts a police officer in 2008 to gunshots using ShotSpotte­r, strategica­lly placed acoustic sensors designed to help police track gunfire, in East Palo Alto.

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