Survivor Sues AI Gun Detection Company After System Fails to Spot Weapon in Nashville Shooting

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A survivor of the January 2025 Antioch High School shooting in Nashville is suing Omnilert, the company behind an AI-powered gun detection system that failed to alert authorities before a gunman opened fire in the cafeteria, killing one student. The lawsuit alleges Omnilert oversold its technology's capabilities despite knowing about significant operational limitations that could result in detection failures during actual emergencies.

AI School Surveillance System Faces Legal Challenge After Fatal Shooting

An Omnilert lawsuit filed in Davidson County court in May 2026 has thrust AI gun detection technology into the spotlight after a security system failure at Antioch High School in Nashville. Antonyous Henin, who was grazed in the arm during the January 2025 school shooting, is suing both Omnilert, the manufacturer of the AI-powered gun detection system, and System Integrations, the company that installed and maintained it

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. The Nashville high school shooting left two people dead—a 16-year-old girl and the 17-year-old gunman who died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound after firing 10 shots within 17 seconds inside the cafeteria

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Source: Futurism

Source: Futurism

System Failed to Detect Weapon Despite Bold Marketing Claims

The lawsuit alleges that Omnilert knew or should have known about "significant operational limitations in its gun detection systems that could result in detection failures during actual emergencies," including limitations based on camera placement, proximity of the weapon to camera sensors, camera angle, lighting, and weapon visibility

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. The complaint references marketing materials from Omnilert's website that boasted of "unparalleled reliability" and the ability to detect a weapon "before a shot is fired"

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. The company even invoked the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School tragedy in its promotional materials, claiming its AI-powered visual gun detection "could have mitigated or prevented" that devastating mass shooting

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$1 Million Contract Raises Questions About Resource Allocation

Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools approved a contract valued at more than $1 million with Omnilert and System Integrations in 2023 to add the gun-detection software to the district's existing network of security cameras. The agreement, which took effect on March 23, 2023, and ran through November 30, 2025, had a total value not exceeding $1,050,487.80 distributed over two years

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. After the shooting, Omnilert CEO Dave Fraser suggested the AI school surveillance system hadn't actually failed, claiming "the location of the shooter and the firearm meant that the weapon was not visible" and "this is not a case of the firearm not being recognized by the system"

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. An MNPS spokesperson echoed this reasoning, stating the system "does work, but it's not going to work in every instance, in every spot, based on where that weapon might be visible"

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Pattern of False Alarms and Detection Failures Emerges

This isn't the first time the effectiveness of AI surveillance has been questioned. In October 2025, Omnilert's technology mistook a bag of Doritos for a weapon, triggering a police response to a 16-year-old student carrying only a snack. Months later, another AI surveillance system called ZeroEyes sent a school into lockdown after confusing a middle schooler's clarinet for a weapon

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. Chris Smith, one of the plaintiff's attorneys, expressed skepticism about the technology: "I just thought that it was kind of bullshit. I have a Tesla, and I think Tesla's self-driving is bullshit. It's not ready for prime time! How could you possibly be entrusting of that? That's your plan to protect kids from school shootings? Why is this any better than a metal detector?"

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Experts Question Value as AI Surveillance Expands in Schools

Despite the dubious track record, AI surveillance is being increasingly deployed in schools across the country. David Riedman, an education and security expert who maintains the K-12 School Shooting Database, told Ars Technica: "I've never seen a school shooting where there was a lack of notification." He suggested the money spent deploying Omnilert "could have gone to a counselor or something else to a kid in crisis," adding that "every decision that you make is pointing away resources from something else"

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. The survivor sues at a critical moment when schools must weigh whether these systems represent genuine safety improvements or merely provide a facade of security through flashy AI promises that fail when tested in real emergencies. The outcome of this case could influence how districts allocate millions in security funding and whether they continue investing in AI-powered detection systems that have failed to detect weapon threats during actual crises.

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