As U.S. authorities grapple with how to regulate the use of unarmed
drones in U.S. skies, a small network of police, first responders and
experts is already flying unmanned aircraft.
These operators say rapidly evolving drone technology is already
reshaping disaster response, crime scene reconstruction, crisis
management and tactical operations.
Critics of U.S. domestic drone use worry about privacy and safety.
Several dozen local police departments, federal agencies and
universities have special FAA permits to fly drones in U.S. airspace.
“Like a lot of law enforcement agencies, our first thoughts were,
‘Cool! Let’s use it for tactical missions – for chasing bad guys across
the county,’” said Ben Miller, a Mesa County, Colorado, sheriff’s
deputy.
“But the reality is you’ll have a mission like that once or twice a
year,” he said. “The real utility of unmanned aerial systems is not the
sexy stuff. It’s the crime scene and accident reconstruction.”
Miller’s department in rural western Colorado has the widest approval
to fly drones of any local law enforcement agency in the U.S.
Mesa has flown 40 missions in just over three years, “none of them
surveillance,” said Miller, who crafted the department’s drone program
and spent a year devising training protocol for fellow deputies before
receiving FAA approval.
“We can now bring the crime scene right into the jury box, and literally re-enact the crime for jurors,” he said.
Miller can program the department’s GPS-enabled, 3.5-pound
DraganflyerX6 quad copter to fly two concentric circles, at two
elevations, capturing about 70 photos, for about $25 an hour. He then
feeds those images into online digital mapping software, which creates a
virtual crime scene that he uploads to his iPad.
Holding the iPad with one hand, Miller recently demonstrated for
Reuters how 3-D digital reconstruction can serve as a road map for
investigators, and, soon, for juries.
Miller said the same technique can often eliminate the need to shut
down highways after accidents so investigators can take accurate
measurements.
“For most small law enforcement agencies like ours, the revolution is not in the equipment, but in the cost,” he said.
Recent applications to the FAA, obtained by the civil liberties group
Electronic Freedom Foundation, indicate many police want drones for
drug investigations, covert surveillance and high-risk tactical
operations.
Domestic drones currently cost anywhere from $10,000 to $20,000 for a
small system like the DraganflyerX6, which stays aloft only 15 minutes,
to more than $1 million for sophisticated fixed-wing drones that can
remain aloft for hours.
Military models are also being used by the Department of Homeland
Security, which has a fleet of at least 10 unarmed Predator drones,
powerful enough to identify a tennis shoe from 60,000 feet up.
First-generation drones can’t yet carry an onboard sense-and-avoid
system, a requirement of manned aircraft. Experts said mass-produced,
drone-mounted sense-and-avoid technology is still two to five years
away.
FAA officials are required to open U.S. skies in 2015 to widespread
use of unmanned aircraft by public agencies and private industry.
PRESSING THE BOUNDARIES
Texas pilot Gene Robinson has been designing and flying domestic
drone systems custom-made for disaster and emergency response for more
than a decade.
Robinson said his drone has flown dozens of search missions for law
enforcement agencies in 29 states and four countries, locating 10
missing persons after traditional search-and-rescue resources were
exhausted.
When the FAA formally banned commercial drone use in the U.S. in
2007, Robinson registered his company as a 501(c)3 nonprofit to sidestep
the ban on commercial drone use.
“That drives the FAA nuts,” Miller said.
As far as Robinson is concerned, the feeling is mutual.
FAA officials continued to deny his requests for emergency approval, Robinson said.
He reached a breaking point with the FAA in 2010, in a field outside
Dallas, Texas. Standing beside the frantic father of a missing
7-year-old, Robinson received a call from an FAA official who, he said,
denied his request to use his drone to search for the child.
He refused to relay the information to the father.
“I’m not going to tell the father,” he said he told the official. “You are.”
He handed the phone to the father and was “lucky to get that phone back in one piece.”
Weeks later, Robinson said, local authorities who had sought his assistance located the child’s body.
Robinson said he no longer seeks FAA permission for emergency response.
After that incident, “I decided it was going to be easier to ask forgiveness than permission.”
Reuters
Friday, 22 March 2013
Domestic drones are already reshaping U.S.crime-fighting
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