Document Category: Shotspotter
| Title | Content | Date Filed | Jurisdiction | Categories | Link | hf:doc_author | hf:doc_categories |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Motion to Discount ShotSpotter Alert in Reasonable Suspicion Analysis and Suppress Evidence Seized from an Illegal Terry Stop | Relying on empirical studies from New York City, Chicago, Houston, and Dayton, Ohio, this motion explains that ShotSpotter alerts are unreliable because they rarely lead to discovery of gun-related crime or weapon use. It further argues that ShotSpotter alerts are unparticularized because they improperly equate assessments about a place with assessments about individuals in that place. Finally, it contends that police should not be permitted to combine a ShotSpotter alert with other vague and unparticularized hunches—like the high-crime-area label—to establish reasonable suspicion, particularly given cited research about how ShotSpotter sensors are predominantly placed in communities of color and police are more likely to describe these same communities as high-crime areas regardless of actual crime rates.
| May 26, 2025 | National | 4th Amendment, Evidence, Police, Race, Shotspotter | national | 4th-amendment evidence police race shotspotter | |
| Shotspotter – Civil Complaint – ShotSpotter Is Unreliable and Ineffective | p. 13-59 overview studies of Shotspotter accuracy and racially biased implementation | July 21, 2022 | 7th Cir., Illinois, National | 4th Amendment, Evidence, Police, Race, Shotspotter | 7th-cir illinois national | 4th-amendment evidence police race shotspotter |