Crime rates remain high despite America’s new policing technology

Crime rates remain high despite America’s new policing technology



America’s new policing tech isn’t ⁢cutting crime

ON MAY 31ST 2020 the life of Michael Williams, a 66-year-old from the south side⁢ of Chicago, fell apart. That evening‌ Mr Williams picked up‌ a young hitchhiker in his neighbourhood. A few blocks⁢ later, the ⁤young man was shot, apparently through the passenger window of the car. Mr Williams⁢ rushed him ‌to hospital; two‍ days later the man died, and a few weeks after that Mr Williams was arrested. He spent the next 11 months in the Cook County jail, accused of murder. But before‍ the case​ could come to trial, it was thrown out, when the public prosecutor in the Chicago area decided to ​withdraw its main evidence. Since last⁢ year Mr‌ Williams has been suing the City⁤ of⁤ Chicago, alleging that the city’s police department ⁣deliberately relied on a case it knew was flimsy. ⁢

That evidence was from Shotspotter, an “acoustic gunfire-detection” system supplied by SoundThinking, a firm⁢ based in California. Shotspotter automatically recognises and analyses the‌ sound of gunshots from a network of⁤ microphones spread across cities—Chicago has by far the largest network in America.‍ By triangulating the recordings it can, in theory, pinpoint where a gun has been fired. The idea is that this will⁢ help‌ police officers ‌respond more quickly ⁤to shootings, and find out about⁢ shootings that go unreported.

Chicago spends over ⁣$10m a year for the service.⁤ But it is controversial. Cases like that of Mr Williams are partly ⁣why. Before his election in⁤ May, Brandon ​Johnson, Chicago’s left-wing mayor, promised to end the city’s contract (as mayor he has extended it,⁢ seemingly by accident).

2023-12-27 10:10:47
Source⁤ from www.economist.com
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