Why Accuracy Matters
In court houses, where crowds gather, the difference between accurate indoor shot detection and a false-positive system can literally be measured in lives saved. Accurate indoor shot detection can identify the precise floor, room, or open-air coordinates within seconds—eliminating the deadly delays caused by vague “building alarms.” Systems proven under DHS SAFETY Act testing achieve >99.9 % detection with near-zero false alarms from slamming doors or fireworks, ensuring first responders in court houses receive exact shooter location and weapon type intelligence the moment the first round is fired.
Learning more about indoor shot detection for court houses
Want to see indoor shot detection in action across court houses? Leading providers offer virtual and on-site demonstrations that simulate real gunfire events in indoor concourses, outdoor plazas, and multi-story atriums. Witness firsthand how floor-level accuracy and instant law-enforcement integration work in environments mirroring court house’s most vulnerable public spaces.
How to choose the right indoor shot detection for court houses
When evaluating indoor shot detection providers for your venue, demand proof of reporting accuracy. For example, ask for test data showing the system can distinguish the 12th floor from the 14th during live-fire trials. Only a handful of SAFETY Act-certified platforms have passed these DHS-evaluated vertical tests—critical for a skyline of mixed-use towers.
Other considerations for indoor shot detection in court houses
Beyond accuracy, court house decision-makers must consider liability exposure. Only DHS SAFETY Act-covered indoor shot detection provides statutory caps or elimination of third-party claims following an attack. Without this protection, even the most accurate system leaves venues like schools and businesses vulnerable to lawsuits claiming the technology “should have done more.”
Learn More about SAFETY Act-approved indoor shot detection