Chicago Sun-Times

POLICE EXPANDING TECH- BASED CRIME- FIGHTING INITIATIVE­S

- BY RACHEL HINTON Staff Reporter Email: rhinton@suntimes.com Twitter: @rrhinton

Chicago Police Supt. Eddie Johnson on Tuesday announced an expansion of technology- based initiative­s that he said have helped reduce shootings by 13 percent citywide this year so far.

The Gresham District will be the latest district to have the ShotSpotte­r gunshot sensor program and the Strategic Decision Support Center. The programs allow analysts from the Police Department and the University of Chicago Crime Lab to review gunfire data and ultimately determine which areas need more officers.

Police response time has increased by five to seven minutes in the four districts that currently have ShotSpotte­r, which directs officers to the sites where shots were fired, Johnson said at a news conference.

Johnson called investment­s in policing technology “the centerpiec­e of Chicago’s crime strategy.”

The effect of the crime strategy is noticeable in the city’s hot spots, he said. Shootings have been reduced by 37 percent in the Englewood District and by 27 percent in the Harrison District. The Deering and Austin districts saw reductions by 17 and 14 percent, respective­ly.

Although the number of shootings in the city are down, the number of homicides is up.

And while the Harrison District may have seen a decline in shootings, crime has gone up in the neighborin­g Ogden District, Johnson said. For Gresham, the addition of the ShotSpotte­r program will lead to better prosecutio­ns and prevention of shooting incidents, Cmdr. William Bradley said.

“While this is still a pilot program, we’ve seen promising signs that utilizing this technology to make us more predictive in our deployment­s and faster in our response times is helping us to reduce violence,” Johnson said.

Johnson compared crime fighting to squeezing a balloon: you squeeze one side, and sometimes all of the air is forced to the other.

The Ogden district is another high- crime neighborho­od that will be getting the technology- based initiative­s soon, police officials said.

Though the programs have helped, Johnson said informatio­n from the community is key.

“We know that people in these neighborho­ods hear and know who these individual­s are,” the top cop said. “When the neighborho­ods get fed up and start giving us the informatio­n we need, then we’ll start seeing a reduction in gun violence.”

 ?? | CHICAGO POLICE ?? Police Supt. Eddie Johnson said technology- based initiative­s have helped reduce shootings by 13 percent citywide this year.
| CHICAGO POLICE Police Supt. Eddie Johnson said technology- based initiative­s have helped reduce shootings by 13 percent citywide this year.

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