Little Rock, Arkansas, Drops Intrusive, Ineffective ShotSpotter System
For all the money spent on it, the gunshot detection system has a spotty record at best.

The city government of Little Rock, Arkansas, recently dumped ShotSpotter, a gunshot detection tool that's been adopted by some crime-troubled cities, but which has long been controversial. While billed as a means of speeding response to violent crime the technology has a history of unreliability, generating large numbers of bogus reports. Also, being based on the use of microphones, ShotSpotter can capture sounds other than gunshots, including private conversations. Altogether, even acknowledging the city's struggles with crime, it made the right choice in putting its resources elsewhere.
Last week's vote by the Little Rock Board of Directors (essentially the city council) apparently came as something of a surprise when the decision to extend the contract with SoundThinking Inc., the company behind ShotSpotter, failed by one vote. One important factor in dropping the contract was that the city has relied since 2018 on federal funding to pay for what the Arkansas Times describes as "dozens of ShotSpotter sensors in a 2-square-mile area south of Interstate 630," but would have needed to tap tax revenues to continue the project. But disappointing results also played a role.
"I cannot support this continuation of this contract because I do not think the technology is there," Director Kathy Webb commented.
That's a fair concern considering not just the expense of the contract—the original deal cost $290,000 for two years—but also of the resources tied up in responding to false ShotSpotter reports. Other cities have run into the same problem, finding that relatively few incidents reported by the technology result in the discovery of criminal activity.
ShotSpotter "Rarely Produces Evidence" of a Crime
"Of the 50,176 confirmed and dispatched ShotSpotter alerts, 41,830 report a disposition—the outcome of the police response to an incident," a 2021 report from Chicago's Inspector General noted of the technology's record in that city from 2020 to 2021. "A total of 4,556 of those 41,830 dispositions indicate that evidence of a gun-related criminal offense was found, representing 9.1% of CPD responses to ShotSpotter alerts." Even fewer alerts, 2.1 percent, led to an investigation.
The Chicago Inspector General concluded that "ShotSpotter alerts rarely produce documented evidence of a gun-related crime, investigatory stop, or recovery of a firearm."
Worse, then-65-year-old Michael Williams spent a year in jail after Chicago police tried to massage a ShotSpotter report into a homicide case against him during the unrest of 2020. Prosecutors eventually conceded they had insufficient evidence to go to trial.
Then, last year, Chicago police responding to a ShotSpotter alert fired at a teenager who was lighting fireworks. Fortunately, they missed.
A 2021 report from the School of Criminal Justice and Criminology at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock was less negative than its Chicago counterpart, but still not encouraging. In Little Rock, ShotSpotter was implemented alongside the creation of a Crime Guns Intelligence Unit (CGIU) by the police department, and the two were assessed together. While there was some decline in violent crime during that period, "analyses of gun-involved homicides did not provide evidence of an effect of the CGIU or ShotSpotter on homicides. It is likely that the sample size of homicides was too small to identify a significant effect."
Little Rock has spent a lot of money on a gunshot detection system that doesn't seem to do much of anything, and what little results are seen could be attributed to a dedicated unit within the local police department. That might be OK so long as the price of the surveillance system is paid by gifts from the feds, but not when it comes from locally sourced tax revenue.
ShotSpotter Is Always Listening
Then there's the fact that a microphone-based technology inherently has the ability to record more than just gunshots. As Anthony Fisher wrote for Reason in 2015, "when ShotSpotter is triggered, it captures a few seconds of sound before and after the triggering moment. Though the microphones are as high as 100 feet above the ground, they have the ability to pick up intelligible conversations."
In Oakland, California, ShotSpotter captured the last words of a dying man and helped to identify the killer. That might be called a win for the system. But audio surveillance of streets is sufficiently worrisome that a court in Massachusetts excluded a ShotSpotter recording of an argument from evidence as a violation of the state's wiretap laws.
There are inherent risks in sprinkling microphones around populated areas and counting on the people controlling them to not misuse their tools to eavesdrop, or to listen only to bad people. You never know which people, neighborhoods, or businesses the powers-that-be will decide are worthy of extra scrutiny, and which verbal exchanges might attract their attention.
"People in public places—for example, having a quiet conversation on a deserted street—are often entitled to a reasonable expectation of privacy, without overhead microphones unexpectedly recording their conversations," the Electronic Frontier Foundation's (EFF) Matthew Guariglia warned about the surveillance tool as he called on "cities to stop using ShotSpotter."
Unsurprisingly, EFF applauded Little Rock for discontinuing its arrangement with SoundThinking for the ShotSpotter system. Through its Atlas of Surveillance, EFF maintains a list of agencies that still use ShotSpotter and other surveillance technologies.
A Waste of Federal Grant Money
Incidentally, SoundThinking has developed a reputation as a matchmaker for linking local law enforcement agencies with federal grants that fund the use of ShotSpotter. "In at least three cases, the company offered to prepare a police department's application for a federal grant and get letters of support from other government officials," Jon Schuppe and Joshua Eaton reported for NBC News in 2022. That encourages the adoption of the system by localities that are happy to use anything that somebody else is paying for—at least for the first few years.
With the new Trump administration looking to improve government efficiency and setting DOGE loose to trim wasteful and unnecessary federal expenditures, it might be useful to take a look at those grants. Why should the federal government be subsidizing clumsy and dangerous local surveillance schemes?
As a threat to our civil liberties that doesn't live up to its anti-crime billing, ShotSpotter would be a worthy place to cut spending.
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"That might be OK so long as the price of the surveillance system is paid by gifts from the feds, ..."
Please Mr Tucille: explain how forcing other people to pay for something makes it ok.
"'That might be OK so long as the price of the surveillance system is paid by gifts from the feds, ...'"
"Please Mr Tucille: explain how forcing other people to pay for something makes it ok."
Please explain why you think Mr Tucille was voicing his own opinion. I see no reason to be believe he thinks that way.
I don't think Mr. Tucille was voicing his own opinion on the subject. More like he was explaining how the city council thought about the sugject. They think is Ok for them to approave the expenditure of money when it isn't coming from directly from their constitutents, but not OK when the local taxpayers have to pay for it.
Dave doesn't get sarcasm.
...a gunshot detection tool that's been adopted by some
crime-troubleddemocrat run cities....It's hard to blame ShotSpotter for mistaking a teen lighting fireworks for gunfire. We have a joke game in St. Louis called, 'Gunshots or Fireworks?' because they do sound similar and both are far too common to hear (for things banned in the city).
What's easier to blame are the officers who fired at the teen who was lighting fireworks. Sounds like they did a poor job of assessing the situation before going off half-cocked.
That is assuming he was just doing something relatively harmless and celebratory, not trying to harm people with said fireworks. Because I heard that term, 'lighting fireworks' used an awful lot during the 2020 riots, disingenuously, to describe people who lobbed civic-display-sized mortar shells into police lines, with the intent to injure and maim.
Did ShotSpotter claim they could distinguish fireworks and gun shots? Either they never tested their system in the real world, or they lied. Considering their track record over many years, I'm going with corruption, which (IIRC) was proven in Chicago.
civic-display-sized mortar shells
This seems like a white people issue. The fact that your game is called "Gunshots or Fireworks?" and not "Mortars or mortar fire?" or "Inbound or outbound?" suggests the same or similar is true in your neighborhood.
'White People Issue'? I'm not sure I understand what you're getting at.
In any case, from looking at the link about the fireworks incident in Chicago, there's video attached to that article, and it appears that the police officers showed up because of the ShotSpotter report, found a kid in the area, asked him about it, and he told them it was fireworks.
Then, someone else in the vicinity set off some more fireworks, one of the cops shat his pants and yelled 'shots fired!' Fired blindly in the general area of the kid he was questioning, who obviously didn't fire any shots, or fireworks, and retreated to his patrol vehicle, reporting over the radio, "They saying it's fireworks but ran in the house"
'White People Issue'? I'm not sure I understand what you're getting at.
The overlap between civic-display-sized firework users and people who get shot at in the ghetto is small. Especially in Chicago where it's a trip across the border and you can buy three civic-display-sized fireworks for like 3 uninterrupted hours worth of black cats and bottle rockets.
I see, and USAID/Soros-funded BLM / antrifa rioters are not your typical mortar fireworks users, either.
"It's hard to blame ShotSpotter for mistaking a teen lighting fireworks for gunfire."
I don't think the idea is to blame ShotSpotter: it's hard to argue with the results. If the system can't distinguish between gunfire and fireworks, it's just far less useful as a tool - while causing resources to be wasted to determine that the sound was not gunfire after all.
The answer, of course, is to criminalize making any sound that can be confused with gunfire and punishing the offenders as if they had actually fired a gun. See vaping bans that treat vaping exactly the same as smoking for precedent.
shot spotter has a proven utility when used by our Armed Forces.
If you ever watch videos of modern combat, bullet impacts around our troops are always accompanied by shouts of where is it coming from?!
shot spotter does give troops in combat a direction and an azimuth for the source of the gunfire.
That’s great, but I don’t want to live in a surveillance state.
Not to mention that in many of the modern combat videos I see lately, I remain unconvinced under the rules of engagement that the troops in the space are any more justified than the cops firing on the kids lighting off fireworks.
Add thousands of buildings, vehicles, and people to the mix, and it doesn't work so well.
If you ever watch videos of modern combat, bullet impacts around our troops are always accompanied by shouts of where is it coming from?!
shot spotter does give troops in combat a direction and an azimuth for the source of the gunfire.
Let's see how much money we can waste optimizing this SNAFU!
Shot spotter *sometimes* gives troops in combat a direction and an azimuth and *sometimes* it is right and *sometimes* they're actually able to return fire effectively on said position.
Most of the time however, it is a woefully ineffective partial solution to a problem compared to more complete weapons/combat/battlespace platforms.
The key is the federal funds. These should be given as part of a controlled experiment within a few cities. If the results are as reported, the fed should discontinue support. As it stands now, it seems the cities can pull the plug, but the fed is still going on its merry way funding a program of dubious value, aka Waste.
We understand Toosilly, you are pro-crime and absolutely pro-criminal. The only controversies are those contrived by the likes of you to keep murderers on the streets. How dare a conversation on the street be picked up, or police respond to similar sounds to gunfire; best to just defund the police and hope nothing bad happens (or ignore it when it does).
My money sez it'll be the first thing shot.
Second City Cop has a different view of Shotspotter.
https://secondcitycop.blogspot.com/search?q=shotspotter
There's more to the tech than 'evidence of crimes'. It helps direct resources into an area where a shot has been detected - this has saved lives in Chicago and currently Chicago is experience a whole lot of found bodies because no one is reporting the shots that kill them.
Maybe they should call the technology "BodySpotter".
Once again and as usual, we're talking about the magazine that will defend a murderous child abuser with "Shaken baby syndrome is junk science" as long as nobody was in the room to watch them beat their child to death.
And I'm by no means on Reason's side regarding catering to criminals, but if nobody including the victim is going to identify the shooter then really it's more "CulturalCelebrationSpotter".
Sure. But my point is that there are reasons *other* than just 'increases number of arrests' as a reason to deploy the system - saving a few lives and not having bodies discovered in the alleys as snow melts in March may (or may not) be worth that.
But Shotspotter isn't the total negative Tuccille paints here. There's bad and good packed in to the system. It absolutely wouldn't be worth the negatives (let alone cost) in Phoenix. But in Chicago? Baltimore?
How about redeploying all the surveillance gear to inside federal, state, and local facilities? Including their favorite lunch spots.