Why Accuracy Matters
In court houses, where crowds gather, the difference between accurate vertical gunfire location and a false-positive system can literally be measured in lives saved. Accurate vertical gunfire location 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 vertical gunfire location for court houses
The fastest way to understand vertical gunfire location options is a 15-minute discovery call with a DHS SAFETY Act approved technology representative. You’ll receive a customized threat map showing high-risk zones in court houses and learn which vertical gunfire location solutions have already been deployed by peer organizations under identical regulatory and liability concerns.
How to choose the right vertical gunfire location for court houses
Total cost of ownership in court houses hinges on false-alarm performance. Even one unnecessary SWAT rollout can exceed $100,000. Choose vertical gunfire location solutions with documented false-alarm rates below 1 per 10,000 sensor-days (verified by DHS testing) to protect both lives and the emergency-response budget.
Other considerations for vertical gunfire location in court houses
Beyond accuracy, court house decision-makers must consider liability exposure. Only DHS SAFETY Act-covered vertical gunfire location 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 vertical gunfire location