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Winston-Salem Police Department launches ShotSpotter technology in effort to reduce gun violence

According to the department, grant funding was used to purchase and implement the technology

Winston-Salem Police Department launches ShotSpotter technology in effort to reduce gun violence

According to the department, grant funding was used to purchase and implement the technology

DEPARTMENT IS USING A NEW TECHNOLOGY TO HELP REDUCE GUN VIOLENCE WITHIN THE CITY, BUT TH AT NEW TECHNOLOGY ISN’T WITHOUT CRITICISM. WE LEARNED MORE ABOUT IT TODAY. INSIDE THE WINSTON-SALEM POLICE DEPARTMENT USING TSHI INTERACTIVE MAP INVESTIGATORS SAY NEW TECHNOLOGY IS ALLOWING OFF. TO QUICKLY IDENTIFY POSSIBLE GUNSHOTS. IT WILL POPULATE ON THIS MAP ON SHOTS FIRE ALERT TAKES PLACE LIEUTENANT. AMY GOLDEN IS PART OF THE CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS DIVISION ATHE T DEPARTMENT AND IS HELPING ROLL OUT THE NEW PROGRAM SHOT OTSPTER A GUNSHOT DETECTION SYSTEM ON OUR MAP A GUNSHOT ALERT IS DEPICTED BY A GUN. SO WHEN A SHOTS FIRE ALERT COMES OFF A GUN WILL POP UP THEREND A THAT MEANS IT’S BEEN DETECTED BY THE SENSORS. THEY SEND IT TO THEIR INCIDENT REEWVI CENTER WHO THEY HAVE ACOUSTIC EXPERTS WHO THEN REVIEW THAT DATA THEY ANAZELY IT MAKE SURE IT’S GUNFIRE CONFIRM IT THEN THEY SEND IT TO US. ANDO SHE T SAME TIME OUR DISPATCH CENTER GETS THAT INFORMATION THE AGENCY BROUGHT THE TECHNOLOGY ONLINE AUGUST 19TH CALLED AND SAYS SHE SAYS ETH SENSORS COVER THREE SQUARE MILES AND THAT THOSE LOCATIONS WERE DETERMINED USING DAAT SHOWING WHERE THE MOST GUN VIOLENCE OCCURS IN THE CITY, BUT THAT IS CONCERNING FOR SOME WE’VE SEEN FROM OTHER CITIES ATTH SHOT SPOTTER ITSELF IS DEPLOYED OVERWHELMINGLY IN COMMUNITIES OF COLOR, WHICH ARE ALREADY DIS. ONLY BEAR THE BRUNT OF A HEAVY POLICE PRESENCE DUSTIN CHICOREL BAYNARD IS WITH THE AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIESNI UON OF NORTH CAROLINA FOR COMMUNITY MEMBERS CONCERNED ABOUT THIS SORT OF TECHNOLOGY AND OTHER SORT OF LAW ENFORCEMENT VIOLATIONS OF PRIVACY OR SAFETY. EYTH NEED TO MAKE THEIR VOICES HEARD THE DEPARTMENT REALLY DID DO DIGILENCE AND RESEARCHING GUNSHOT SYSTEM TECHNOLOGY IN MADE SURE THAT WE MADE A QUALIFIED SELECTION FOR THAT TECHNOLOGY FOR THE COMMUNITY AND LOOKED AT THE AND CRITICISMS THE BENEFITS THAT YOU KNOW, THE CHALLENGES AND IMPLEMENTING TECHNOLOGY AND ULTIMATELY DETEINRME THAT IT WAS A COMPONENT OF OUR VIOLENT CRIME REDUCTION STRATEGY THAT WE WAEDNT TO UTILIZE CARLTON SAYS IN THE FIRST FEW WEEKS SHOT SPOTTER HAS ALREADY BEEN A CRITICAL RESOURCE FOR DEVELOPING LEADS AND IN THE FIRST MONTH OF USE IT PUT OUT 63 ALERTS WITH 225 RNDOUS DETECTED THE DEPARTMENT TELLS US THEY USED GRANT FUNDING TO PURCHASE THE SHOP SPOTTER TECHNOLOGY IN WI
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Winston-Salem Police Department launches ShotSpotter technology in effort to reduce gun violence

According to the department, grant funding was used to purchase and implement the technology

In an effort to reduce gun violence in Winston-Salem, the police department is expanding its Real Time Crime Center, adding new technology to its range of strategies to do so.Using grant funding, the Winston-Salem Police Department launched ShotSpotter, a gunshot detection system, in August. The program identifies possible gunshots using sensors placed in the city. The alert is sent for a review back to ShotSpotter’s review center. If the alert is viable, the department said, the alert goes back to dispatchers within 60 seconds.“It helps us keep the community safer by alerting us to gunfire incidents that occur in the community,” said Lt. Amy Gauldin, of the criminal investigations unit. “ShotSpotter has been wonderful to work with and the technology has really made a difference for our officers.”A federal grant provided the roughly $700,000 in funding to purchase and implement the technology.Gauldin said the alerts allow officers to quickly identify where gunshots may be occurring in the city, allowing officers to respond faster, improving the opportunity to give aid to anyone who may be hurt and tentatively begin collecting evidence.The agency brought the technology online Aug. 19, Gauldin said. Since then, she said, 63 alerts have gone off with 225 rounds detected. She said sensors are located within 3 square miles and that the censor locations were determined based on data indicating areas of the city where gunfire has a history of occurring. ShotSpotter has received criticism over the years. “There are numerous surveillance technologies that are deployed in communities throughout North Carolina, also across the country, that do have serious concerns for people’s privacy and civil liberties and there are a number of consequences related to that,” said Dustin Chicurel-Bayard, communications director for the ACLU of North Carolina.Dustin Chicurel-Bayard said there is general concern about where the technology is being used. “We’ve seen, from other cities, that ShotSpotter itself is deployed overwhelmingly in communities of color, which are already disproportionately bearing the brunt of police presence,” Chicurel-Bayard said.Chicurel-Bayard said there is concern that officers may respond to a false alarm with a heightened expectation of the situation. Chicurel-Bayard urged anyone with a concern to voice their thoughts and continue to push elected leaders and law enforcement for transparency in their efforts.Gauldin said the department has heard concerns and reviewing them, as well as other information about the program and how it is used in other cities, was a part of the process before bringing ShotSpotter technology online. “The department really did due diligence in researching gunshot system technology and made sure that we made a qualified selection of technology for the technology for the community,” she said. “(We) looked at the different criticisms, the benefits, the challenges in implementing the technology and ultimately determined that it was a component of our violent crime reduction strategy that we wanted to utilize because it was effective.”Gauldin said in the first few weeks, the technology has already been a “critical” resource for developing leads in cases. Further details about those cases specifically were not available Wednesday, a spokesperson for the department said, adding that the investigations are ongoing.

In an effort to reduce gun violence in Winston-Salem, the police department is expanding its Real Time Crime Center, adding new technology to its range of strategies to do so.

Using grant funding, the Winston-Salem Police Department launched ShotSpotter, a gunshot detection system, in August. The program identifies possible gunshots using sensors placed in the city. The alert is sent for a review back to ShotSpotter’s review center. If the alert is viable, the department said, the alert goes back to dispatchers within 60 seconds.

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“It helps us keep the community safer by alerting us to gunfire incidents that occur in the community,” said Lt. Amy Gauldin, of the criminal investigations unit. “ShotSpotter has been wonderful to work with and the technology has really made a difference for our officers.”

A federal grant provided the roughly $700,000 in funding to purchase and implement the technology.

Gauldin said the alerts allow officers to quickly identify where gunshots may be occurring in the city, allowing officers to respond faster, improving the opportunity to give aid to anyone who may be hurt and tentatively begin collecting evidence.

The agency brought the technology online Aug. 19, Gauldin said. Since then, she said, 63 alerts have gone off with 225 rounds detected. She said sensors are located within 3 square miles and that the censor locations were determined based on data indicating areas of the city where gunfire has a history of occurring.

ShotSpotter has received criticism over the years.

“There are numerous surveillance technologies that are deployed in communities throughout North Carolina, also across the country, that do have serious concerns for people’s privacy and civil liberties and there are a number of consequences related to that,” said Dustin Chicurel-Bayard, communications director for the ACLU of North Carolina.

Dustin Chicurel-Bayard said there is general concern about where the technology is being used.

“We’ve seen, from other cities, that ShotSpotter itself is deployed overwhelmingly in communities of color, which are already disproportionately bearing the brunt of police presence,” Chicurel-Bayard said.

Chicurel-Bayard said there is concern that officers may respond to a false alarm with a heightened expectation of the situation. Chicurel-Bayard urged anyone with a concern to voice their thoughts and continue to push elected leaders and law enforcement for transparency in their efforts.

Gauldin said the department has heard concerns and reviewing them, as well as other information about the program and how it is used in other cities, was a part of the process before bringing ShotSpotter technology online.

“The department really did due diligence in researching gunshot system technology and made sure that we made a qualified selection of technology for the technology for the community,” she said. “(We) looked at the different criticisms, the benefits, the challenges in implementing the technology and ultimately determined that it was a component of our violent crime reduction strategy that we wanted to utilize because it was effective.”

Gauldin said in the first few weeks, the technology has already been a “critical” resource for developing leads in cases. Further details about those cases specifically were not available Wednesday, a spokesperson for the department said, adding that the investigations are ongoing.