Chicago will stop using its gunshot detection system... after the Democratic Convention
Mayor Brandon Johnson announced that the city would not renew its contract with ShotSpotter, a tool that detects gunshots in the city and alerts police.
Chicago will stop using the gunshot detection system. Mayor Brandon Johnson announced this Tuesday that they would not renew the contract with ShotSpotter, a tool that detects gunshots in the city and alerts the Police.
The Democratic mayor assured in the press release that the tool, used by 150 cities in the United States, will be replaced by other "more effective" resources and tactics, and that his intention is to maintain the downward trend in crime levels. :
ShotSpotter expires after Democratic National Convention in Chicago
Specifically, the contract that Chicago made with SoundThinking, the company that owns ShotSpotter, will expire this Friday and the tool will stop being used at the end of September, just when the Democratic National Committee Convention ends.
A period of time that, as detailed by the company in a press release collected by ABC7 Chicago , is ineffective in "providing the best possible data and analysis to the residents of the city of Chicago":
Police satisfied with the operation of ShotSpotter
The decision was announced the same day it was announced that 39 shots had been recorded over that weekend. However, the AP assured, it represented a decrease of 30% compared to the same period in 2023, when the total number of shots was 56.
This decrease in crime, said former Chicago Police Superintendent Eddie Johnson to ABC7Chicago, could be partly due to the use of ShotSpotter:
Criticism against Johnson in Chicago
Criticism against Johnson for his decision to end this tool was immediate. Local Representative Silvana Tabares charged against Johnson and pointed to disastrous management of city funds, which she says will end up in the wrong hands. "The only ones who are against ShotSpotter are the organizers. The community organizers who want to use the money that saves brown and black lives in their own pockets," Tabares said at a press conference this week.
The latest polls do not support Johnson either. According to data from the end of January 2024, only about 20% of respondents that month, in a poll funded by school choice advocates, said they approve of the way Chicago's mayor is doing his job. Faced with this, 70% rated his performance as average or poor. Only 7% of respondents called Johnson's performance as mayor "excellent," and another 14% called it "good." The remaining 69% rated Johnson's performance as "fair" (27%) or "poor" (43%) or said they "didn't know" (10%).