Oroville Mercury-Register

Senators question DOJ funding for AI-powered policing technology

- By Martha Mendoza and Michael Tarm

CHICAGO >> A Democratic senator said the U.S. Justice Department needs to look into whether the algorithm-powered police technologi­es it funds contribute to racial bias in law enforcemen­t and lead to wrongful arrests.

Sen. Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, was responding to an investigat­ion by The Associated Press published Thursday about the possibilit­y of bias in courtroom evidence produced by an algorithm-powered gunshot detection technology called ShotSpotte­r. The system, which can be funded by Justice Department grants, is used by law enforcemen­t in more than 110 U.S. communitie­s to detect gunfire and respond to crime scenes faster.

“While there continues to be a national debate on policing in America, it’s become increasing­ly clear that algorithms and technologi­es used during investigat­ions, like ShotSpotte­r, can further racial biases and increase the potential for sending innocent people to prison,” Wyden said.

Chicago prosecutor­s relied on audio evidence picked up by ShotSpotte­r sensors to charge 65-yearold Michael Williams with murder last year for allegedly shooting a man inside his car. ShotSpotte­r has said their system has trouble identifyin­g gunshots in enclosed spaces. Williams spent nearly a year in jail, until late last month a judge dismissed the case against him at the request of prosecutor­s, who said they had insufficie­nt evidence.

“Fundamenta­lly, these tools are outsourcin­g critical policing decisions, leaving the fate of people like Michael Williams to a computer,” Wyden said.

In Chicago, where Williams was jailed, community members rallied in front of a police station on Thursday, demanding the city end its contract with ShotSpotte­r, a system they said “creates a dangerous situation where police treat everyone in the alert area as an armed threat.”

The Chicago Police Department on Friday defended the technology in response to calls to end the city’s ShotSpotte­r contract. Chicago is ShotSpotte­r’s largest customer.

“ShotSpotte­r has detected hundreds of shootings that would have otherwise gone unreported,” it said in a statement emailed to the AP, adding that the technology is just one of many tools the department relies on “to keep the public safe and ultimately save lives.”

It said real-time ShotSpotte­r alerts about gunshots mean officers respond faster and more consistent­ly than when depending on someone to call 911 to report gunfire.

“The system gives police the opportunit­y to reassure communitie­s that law enforcemen­t is there to serve and protect them and helps to build bridges with residents who wish to remain anonymous,” the department said.

ShotSpotte­r uses a secret algorithm to analyze noises detected by sensors mounted on light poles and buildings. Employees at the company’s Incident Review Centers in Washington, D.C., and Newark, California, look at the wavelength­s and listen to sounds that the computer deems possible gunshots to make a final determinat­ion before alerting police.

“The point is anything that ultimately gets produced as a gunshot has to have eyes and ears on it,” said CEO Ralph Clark in an interview. “Human eyes and ears, OK?”

Civil rights advocates say the human reviews can introduce bias.

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