More and more US cities are adopting drones for police work

Being a police officer is not what it used to be...
Drones over D.C.
Real-life robocops
The Parrot Anafi
'Drones will help the community'
'They will help us solve more crimes'
Drones won't be on patrol
Not using AI nor facial recognition... yet
Investing in security
Is Big Brother watching you?
Who watches the watchmen?
Coming to a city near you?
Being a police officer is not what it used to be...

It might sound something out of science fiction, but drones, robot dogs, and AI technology might soon be part of your everyday police work.

Drones over D.C.

Back in June, he Washington Post reported that the Washington DC Metropolitan Police announced that they would start dispatching drones along with officers.

Real-life robocops

Barricade situations, serving high-risk warrants, looking for missing persons, and protecting large-scale public gatherings are some of the events that will make use of these real-life robocops.

The Parrot Anafi

So far, the D.C. police drone fleet is made up of five Parrot Anafi drones. This is quite an investment, with each one costs about 15,000 US dollars.

Pictured: The Parrot Anafi drone during a British Army demonstration.

'Drones will help the community'

“The bottom line is that [drones] will help the community and our officers as we are working to make violent crime go down in the District”, mayor Muriel Bowser declared, as quoted by The Washington Post.

'They will help us solve more crimes'

The mayor of the US capital added that “they’ll help us solve more crimes and allow us to use our finite resources more efficiently”.

Drones won't be on patrol

According to NBC News, Chief of Police Pamela Smith remarked that the drones won’t be used for patrol operations.

Not using AI nor facial recognition... yet

“We will not be using artificial intelligence, and nor will we be using facial recognition with the drones yet”, Smith commented to the press.

Investing in security

According to NBC News, mayor Bowser has approved using an increase in the D.C. budget to fund for 200 new CC TV cameras and 50 more license-plate readers for the US capital.

Is Big Brother watching you?

However, not everyone is excited about the idea of having police drones flying around. Quite a few critics label the idea as some sort of dystopian nightmare.

Who watches the watchmen?

“We’re not saying that law enforcement should not use technology, we just [believe] that technology should be regulated and have a transparent process,” said Monica Hopkins, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of the US capital, to The Washington Post.

Coming to a city near you?

Washington, D.C. joins around 1,500 police departments across the United States that are using drone technology in some capacity. Who knows, the drones could soon be coming to a city near you.

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