Samuel Steinberg Seidel, contributing to GOOD, highlights cases of artists recycling weapons into art. Check out these pieces from the Guns to Roses elective at Washington DC’s Youth Rehabilitation Services New Beginnings program:
Others, like Guns into Art, helped recovering addicts at Milestones, a drug rehab center in San Francisco, to explore the Cycles of Addiction:
People will claim that, even with these sensors to identify the location of gunshots, the shooters will likely have fled the scene before responders can arrive. The National Institute of Justice concedes in a report that it is unlikely to lead to more arrests. However, there have been a success stories here and there.
The real long-term benefit, though, is strategic. Aside from the potential to have quicker response time and even arrests in a few cases, the data itself might help to give a much realer picture of the level of crime some of our cities are facing. The aforementioned report states that only a dismal 23% of gunshots are ever reported. Getting these things down on maps and into data models will be a good step towards better law enforcement.
My biggest concern is that police, knowing that a gun is in their vicinity, may get itchier trigger fingers. But that is an issue of management and discipline, and one we should be constantly perfecting nonetheless.