With Criticism Of Its Tech Going Federal, ShotSpotter Fires Back With Inconsistent Assertions

from the throwing-from-the-back-foot dept

ShotSpotter isn’t having a great year. Or two.

Its tech has been called into question — both for its ability to truly detect gunshots and for its contribution (if any) to public safety.

What is known about ShotSpotter isn’t great. The most in-depth examination of the tech was performed by the Inspector General of the city of Chicago. The report produced by the IG was anything but flattering. It found that mics were clustered heavily in neighborhoods predominantly occupied by people of color. It also found the tech wasn’t doing much to help cops tamp down on gun crime in Chicago. Not only did reports rarely produce suspects, much less evidence that would be useful in investigations, it tended to re-route cops from productive patrolling to wandering around streets looking for bullet casings or whatever.

As the tech’s shortcomings became more apparent, more and more cities have chosen not to do business with ShotSpotter. Some terminated their contracts or chose not to renew them. Some reviewed the tech but decided to spend money elsewhere.

Other controversies reared their heads as well. Multiple accusations surfaced claiming ShotSpotter analysts were altering gunshot reports to fit police officers’ narratives or justify questionable stops and arrests. ShotSpotter made things worse by trying to sue journalists who reported on these accusations, even when they did nothing more than report on the contents of court documents.

Presumably, this collective shitstorm was the impetus for ShotSpotter’s re-branding. It now refers to itself as SoundThinking, but underneath the new letterhead, it’s still just ShotSpotter.

The latest broadside was issued by the federal government. Multiple legislators asked the DOJ to look into recipients of grants from the department to ensure they weren’t being spent on tech that was being deployed in contravention of the Civil Rights Act. ShotSpotter was named specifically, due to its omnipresence in neighborhoods primarily occupied by minorities.

ShotSpotter is fighting back. But its efforts haven’t been all that successful, much less coherent. It erected a “save ShotSpotter” page in hopes of peppering Chicago alderpersons with requests that the city not end its contract with the company later this year.

Now, it’s firing back against statements made by federal legislators and the ACLU of Massachusetts. Certainly, one would expect nothing less from a company that is now aware its back is against the wall.

But you’d expect a better effort to be made, especially when it’s not being made by some PR intern, but by company executives. It has hired Boston PR firm Regan Communications Group to assist in its pushback, but the ROI of that disbursement isn’t immediately observable here:

“[I]n incidents where lives may hang in the balance and every second counts, the ShotSpotter system alerts police to virtually all gunfire in a community’s coverage area within 60 seconds,” the company’s president and CEO Ralph A. Clark, wrote in a 35-page, heavily footnoted letter to the lawmakers.

“The fast response made possible by this technology ultimately helps save lives, locate suspects, and collect critical evidence,” he said.

The ShotSpotter response team needs to get on the same page. Earlier this month, the company insisted people complaining about the tech’s uselessness in criminal investigations were looking at the wrong metric for measuring success. Instead, it claimed the tech’s true value was providing fast response to reported gunshots to save victims of shootings.

But in this statement, the company tries to have it both ways. Even if it’s true ShotSpotter creates better response times for medical professionals, very few law enforcement agencies are going to pay millions for tech that does little more than scramble ambulances faster. So, the company continues to insist — despite plenty of evidence to the contrary — that the tech is a meaningful contributor to criminal investigations and public safety.

“We are proud of the value that ShotSpotter delivers to law enforcement to help address criminal gunfire and save lives,” Clark wrote.

Are you really? The “value” you speak so highly of hasn’t been conclusively demonstrated anywhere. When officials have taken a close look at the tech, those close looks are often followed by contract terminations.

The company also responded to the ACLU’s accusations that its tech — at least as deployed by most law enforcement agencies — violates the Civil Rights Act. And again, a company executive was on hand to deliver an inconsistent statement that claims the tech is good for things (1) no one has asked it to be good at (locating gunshot victims) and (2) stuff it has been shown on multiple occasions it’s actually bad at.

“If you read headlines across the country and you can subtract out those pieces that are merely opinion, what you will see reflected over and over again is ShotSpotter locating gunshot wound victims, leading police to arrest offenders,” said Tom Chittum, SoundThinking’s senior vice president of analytics and forensic services.

“And it’s not because this technology simply gets lucky. It’s because it really works,” he said.

While it’s disappointing to learn Tom Chittum isn’t reading my headlines, the real problem here is the claims the company is making. Recently, the company has begun insisting the real value of the tech is locating gunshot victims, rather than locating criminals — a new PR spin that seems to have been adopted because so much data shows the tech isn’t doing much to locate suspects, close investigations, or deliver criminal convictions.

Now, every statement says two things: we save lives and we stop crime. The latter clearly isn’t an accurate portrayal of the tech’s contribution to law enforcement. And the former is something that can’t clearly be determined because absolutely no one is tracking data on EMS response times in relation to ShotSpotter reports.

Obviously, statements issued by companies on the defensive will be extremely self-serving. But no one should be duped by this desperation play from SoundThinking. If the company wants us to believe it saves lives, it should make an effort to compile data that demonstrates it, at the very least, can make this contribution to public safety. And while it does that, we’re free to draw inferences from existing data on its law enforcement utility, which appears to be almost nil.

Filed Under: ,
Companies: aclu, shotspotter, soundthinking

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Comments on “With Criticism Of Its Tech Going Federal, ShotSpotter Fires Back With Inconsistent Assertions”

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13 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

The company also responded to the ACLU’s accusations that its tech — at least as deployed by most law enforcement agencies — violates the Civil Rights Act.

Not to detract from all the other criticisms of ShitSpotter, I find it hard to blame them for law enforcement doing what law enforcement always does in violating the Civil Rights Act.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

Does the Civil Rights Act make “enabling” or “instigation” illegal?

Errr, yes. Yes the CRA does indeed make it a crime to assist, directly or indirectly, in the violation of a civil right prescribed by either the Constitution or by federal statute. I think that “to enable” or to instigate” falls under that particular rubric.

Of course, a court’s mileage may vary….

MrWilson (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

The thing is, this is a terrible implied argument. Even if it weren’t illegal, it’s still immoral and unethical, which is enough to call them out for it. It’s not like it’s just open sourced tech that they’ve released for anyone to use. They choose to market their products/services to law enforcement knowing how they could be used.

The idea that “it’s probably not illegal, so it’s fine to do it,” is an awful standard. There are a bunch of things we won’t have laws against long after people have done some bad shit.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2

I guess to some degree it comes down to motive. If they actually thought they had a decent product, and a segment of the user population abused the product, that would be one thing.

But, if the product was created for the abusers in the first place, that would be another thing.

I do think that they probably thought originally that the product could do some good. And that the abuses were an unforeseen side-effect.

I suppose, if the product actually worked, the authorities would put it where it would do the most good. But, since it doesn’t, the authorities are free to put it wherever it best fits into their narrative.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
mick says:

Not "gunfire"

Replace the word “gunfire” with “any loud noise” in all of Shotspotters press releases and legal arguments, and you have a much more honest statement.

I’ve witnessed this is my own neighborhood, where cops immediately show up every time a kid sets off a firework. Surely they have better things to do, particularly at this time of year.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

It's pretty clear Shotspotter doesn't talk with real live EMS folks

(I wrote a comment similar to this the last time this topic came up.)

EMS, in any major city and even in most smaller ones, already knows where to go, because they know where the hot spots are. And while getting there faster is a reasonable goal, there’s no metric that shows that SS facilitates this and further, there’s no metric that shows it saves lives.

(Faster response times only help if the victim is alive. Someone who was shot 5 times in a drive-by and died almost immediately won’t be helped by a response time of 8 minutes vs. a response time of 12 minutes.)

There’s also a minimum response time based on geography, streets/roads, and traffic. If EMS is already running close to that, then any incremental improvement by SS won’t matter much – and that’s generously presuming that even an incremental improvement can be demonstrated.

And there’s also a minimum response time that EMS wants to have, because unarmed unvested unshielded EMS personnel don’t want to show up while the shooting is still going on – or for that matter, while the shooter(s) are still on scene, because it might occur to them to deny the victims medical attention by winging a few shots in the general direction of the EMS vehicle.

More generally: it’s become obvious that SS is grasping at anything that they think will keep the money flowing. They know that cities are catching on to their game and deciding not to play, so I expect that they’ll say even more ridiculous things as their situation gets worse.

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