Chicago Sun-Times

IF SHOTSPOTTE­R CONSTANTLY MISFIRES, WHAT’S CHICAGO GETTING FOR ITS $33 MILLION?

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In a city where the sound of gunfire is virtually commonplac­e, ShotSpotte­r — with its ability to “hear” gunshots with 97% accuracy and immediatel­y summon the cops — would seem to be a godsend.

But a new analysis questions that claim of near-perfect performanc­e. Police officers responding to calls from ShotSpotte­r, according to the study, report no evidence of a crime 86% of the time.

Our concern is threefold. First, we believe a gunfire detection system that costs taxpayers $33 million ought to have better results.

Second, sending cops out on what amounts to thousands of false alarms is a huge waste of their time.

And, above all, we don’t like the notion that officers are being sent into neighborho­ods thinking there is a dangerous emergency when, in reality, the call might have been triggered by noises misheard as gunfire by ShotSpotte­r. That can, in itself, create a tense situation.

“It sends police racing into communitie­s searching, often in vain, for gunfire,” Jessey Neves, a spokeswoma­n for Northweste­rn University School of Law’s MacArthur Justice Center, which conducted the analysis, told SunTimes reporter Tom Schuba. “Any resident in the area will be a target of police suspicion or worse. These volatile deployment­s can go wrong in an instant,” she said.

Given what’s at stake, City Hall should start asking serious questions — and demanding answers — about ShotSpotte­r’s effectiven­ess.

Police defend ShotSpotte­r

MacArthur Justice Center researcher­s say 40,000 ShotSpotte­r alerts between July 2019 and mid-April wound up with no report being filed by responding officers. Only 10% of the alerts likely involved guns.

The system covers 117 square miles of the city, about half of Chicago’s landmass.

Despite questions raised by the MacArthur analysis, the Chicago Police Department praises the system’s effectiven­ess.

“ShotSpotte­r has detected hundreds of shootings that would have otherwise gone unreported,” police spokesman Thomas Ahern said, adding that the system “is helping us reduce crime and make our neighborho­ods safer.”

And, to be sure, ShotSpotte­r has helped the police locate gunmen and shooting victims since going citywide in 2018.

Last month, for instance, a

ShotSpotte­r detector directed officers to 82nd Street and Coles Avenue, where they found and rushed to the hospital Swaysee Rankin, a 15-year-old boy who had come to the aid of his 10-year-old friend when she was shot a block from the same location just six months earlier.

But questions about ShotSpotte­r’s accuracy have plagued the technology for years.

In a 2017 attempted murder case in San Francisco, a ShotSpotte­r forensic analyst testified that his company’s accuracy computatio­ns did not come from engineers, but from the sales and marketing department.

“We need to give them [customers] a number,” the analyst, Paul Greene, said. “We have to tell them something. … It’s not perfect. The dot on the map is simply a starting point.”

Detroit is in its first month of a four-year contract that has put ShotSpotte­r monitors on the city’s north and northeast sides. But one Detroit police commission­er, Willie Burton, voted against the contract precisely for reasons that should give Chicago pause, too.

“The sensors will detect gunfire in a 100-yard radius, and then the police will look at any person in that radius as a potential suspect,” Burton said. “I just think it could lead to police profiling Black men just because they live in areas with heavy gunfire.”

Variables affect accuracy

While the system is sold to police department­s as a near infallible law enforcemen­t partner, Paul Greene, the ShotSpotte­r expert, testified in San Francisco that a host of factors affect its reliabilit­y, including topography, temperatur­e, humidity, wind speed, how often the equipment is calibrated, and the skill of the humans interpreti­ng the sounds picked up.

Chicago’s ShotSpotte­r contract expires in August. CPD hasn’t decided whether to renew its agreement with the company, but before the department does so it had better ask a lot of questions — and make all the answers public.

What City Hall and CPD should not do is downplay questions about the gunfire detection system, which Mayor Lori Lightfoot effectivel­y did this week when she questioned whether the MacArthur Justice Center research is “actually accurate.”

Lightfoot should put that question to ShotSpotte­r, not to the MacArthur Justice Center.

What’s Chicago really getting for its $33 million?

 ?? FRANK MAIN/SUN-TIMES FILE ?? Chicago Police Capt. Steven Sesso operates a ShotSpotte­r gunshotdet­ection system in the 11th District.
FRANK MAIN/SUN-TIMES FILE Chicago Police Capt. Steven Sesso operates a ShotSpotte­r gunshotdet­ection system in the 11th District.

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