BRINC’s new police drone uses Starlink, carries Narcan, chases vehicles at 60mph

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“If you had Guardian playing a siren tone that was tuned to match the frequency of the speaker and a police car playing as the siren tone next to it, Guardian would be three times louder,” he said.

The Seattle-based BRINC makes drones currently used by over 900 American cities, including Laredo, Texas, and Chattanooga, Tennessee, as part of the growing “drone as first responder” (DFR) system.

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Typically, cities pay a few hundred thousand dollars per year per drone—with contracts reaching into the millions with more drones and more capabilities. A year ago, Newport Beach, California, announced a $2.17 million, five-year contract with BRINC for seven drones. (According to Forbes, BRINC is valued at around $480 million as of last year.)

One existing customer, the Redmond Police Department in the state of Washington, told Ars that this new model was a “completely new and different airframe.”

“This is a huge step in DFR innovation and possibility,” emailed Jill Green, a police spokesperson.

Still, one longtime drone watcher and analyst, Faine Greenwood, wasn’t as taken with this news.

“Even if these claims are true (which I doubt at the moment), the speed/battery life is an incremental improvement over other comparable drone platforms,” Greenwood told Ars by email. “This is not a game-changer situation, and I don’t see it as really changing the calculus for police who are on the fence about drones.”

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