Colorado Will Replace Cops With Drones for Some 911 Calls
While drones are less likely to shoot or maim innocent civilians, they could also pose privacy issues.

Instead of dispatching an officer each time, several Colorado police departments may soon dispatch a drone to respond to certain 911 calls. While the proposal has promise, it also raises uncomfortable questions about privacy.
As Shelly Bradbury reported this week in The Denver Post, "A handful of local law enforcement agencies are considering using drones as first responders—that is, sending them in response to 911 calls—as police departments across Colorado continue to widely embrace the use of the remote-controlled flying machines."
Bradbury quotes Arapahoe County Sheriff Jeremiah Gates saying, "This really is the future of law enforcement at some point, whether we like it or not." She notes that while there are currently no official plans in place, "Gates envisions a world where a drone is dispatched to a call about a broken traffic light or a suspicious vehicle instead of a sheriff's deputy, allowing actual deputies to prioritize more pressing calls for help."
The Denver Police Department—whose then-chief in 2013 called the use of drones by police "controversial" and said that "constitutionally there are a lot of unanswered questions about how they can be used"—is also starting a program, buying several drones over the next year that can eventually function as first responders.
In addition to Denver and Arapahoe County, Bradbury lists numerous Colorado law enforcement agencies that also have drone programs, including the Colorado State Patrol, which has 24 drones, and the Commerce City Police Department, which has eight drones and 12 pilots for a city of around 62,000 people and plans to begin using them for 911 response within a year.
In addition to helping stem the number of calls an officer must respond to in person, some law enforcement agencies see this as a means of saving money. One Commerce City police official told The Denver Post that "what we see out of it is, it's a lot cheaper than an officer, basically." The National Desk reports that Denver intends for its program to make up for an $8.4 million cut to the police budget this year. (After this article's publication, a representative from the Denver Police Department told Reason that "the creation of the drone program is neither related to nor a response to the recent budget cuts.")*
On one hand, there is certainly merit to such a proposal: Unless they're of the Predator variety, drones are much less likely than officers to kill or maim innocent civilians—or their dogs. And as Gates noted, drones could take some of the busywork out of policing by taking some of the more mundane tasks off an officer's plate.
But it also raises privacy concerns to farm out too much police work to unmanned surveillance aircraft.
"Sending out a drone for any time there is a 911 call, it could be dangerous and lead to more over-policing of communities of color," Laura Moraff, a staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Colorado, told The Denver Post. "There is also just the risk that the more that we normalize having drones in the skies, the more it can really affect behavior on a massive scale, if we are just looking up and seeing drones all over the place, knowing that police are watching us."
Indeed, while this sort of dystopic panopticon would certainly make life easier for officers day to day, it would signal the further erosion of the average Coloradan's Fourth Amendment rights.
In Michigan, for example, police hired a drone pilot to take pictures of a person's property rather than go to the trouble of getting a warrant. Earlier this month, the state supreme court upheld the search, ruling that since the purpose was for civil code enforcement and not a criminal violation, it didn't matter whether the search violated the Fourth Amendment.
Thankfully, there are some positive developments on that front: In March, the Alaska Supreme Court ruled against state troopers who flew a plane over a suspect's house and took pictures with a high-powered zoom lens to see if he was growing marijuana.
"The fact that a random person might catch a glimpse of your yard while flying from one place to another does not make it reasonable for law enforcement officials to take to the skies and train high-powered optics on the private space right outside your home without a warrant," the court found. "Unregulated aerial surveillance of the home with high-powered optics is the kind of police practice that is 'inconsistent with the aims of a free and open society.'"
*CORRECTION: This article has been updated to include a clarification from the Denver Police Department.
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Will the drones be capable of killing a friendly dog?
Will the first responder drones be able to check if I… I mean my friend… has been microchi… I mean fully vaccinated before providing emergency care? Just out of curiosity. For a friend. A best friend.
The cops will probably just use them to peep on women.
With fewer bullets, so it will save taxpayer money.
Breaking, Portland just booted its Soros DA.
Audit found that of all the people put into drug 'diversion' program, only 1% responded.
Great success!
We just celebrated our 1 year anniversary of booting ours. Caseload backlog down 50% overall. Office now staffed with practicing attorneys.
Crazy!
Left unsaid is the reality that responding to 911 calls is neither as lucrative nor as exciting as civil asset forfeiture, traffic tickets, and SWAT raids on drug dealers with lots of cash and drugs on hand.
So who gets the Q.I.?
The operator of the drone?
The manufacturer of the drone?
The 911 dispatcher?
Inquiring minds want to know.
You get QI, and You get QI! And You get QI!
Everyone gets QI!
If my neighbor can fly over my backyard and record my family, and nobody sees anything wrong with it, why does anyone have a problem with the police doing it? Or my neighbor sharing it with the police?
This drone shit is fucked up and the laws don't account for it.
Um, because the police can arrest you?
True. All my neighbor can do is bitch about my old tire collection, the cops can bust me for the weed I have growing out of those tires...
Robocop is finally here.
OCP was way more competent than the morons we have now.
Comply, citizen.
The unarmed drone will simply chastise you from a speaker that you should have secured the ability to defend yourself by buying a gun. Then proceed to film your death and feed the video to ChatGPT to file the police report. Meanwhile the meat cops will enjoy some donuts and beer.
The last time I had to call the cops, it was because some dude was violently attacking his girlfriend on the sidewalk in front of my house, and trying to drag her back to his car.
Not sure how effective a drone would have been in that situation.
The real human police in my situation arrived in under 2 minutes, and had my other neighbors not intervened first, might have still been too late. He drove off without her when confronted before they arrived. But not before attempting to run her down with his car. Some of the cops gave chase and one of them stayed to help out the girl and get her some medical attention. Which you also don't get from a drone.
Oh, get this. What Reason doesn't tell you:
But if there was a fight at Colfax and Cherokee and we put a drone in the air and there is no fight and nothing causing traffic issues, then we would reroute our police officers to other emergent calls.
'It's beginning to lift off,' Gonshak said.
And why is this even necessary? Oh. Of course:
And Denver intends for its program to make up for an $8.4 million cut to the police budget this year.
Aha, defund the police and that's what you get. A drone to your 911 call to see if it's exigent enough for a cop to bother showing up. (Also, let's face it - this is Denver, even if they did and they arrested somebody, dude'd be streetside again within 24 hours.)
...one of them stayed to help out the girl and get her some medical attention. Which you also don’t get from a drone.
Drones can dispense aspirin. And probably vaccines too, before long.
I don't really want a hover-drone trying to apply a butterfly closure.
While drones are less likely to shoot or maim innocent civilians, they could also pose privacy issues.
If drones have the ABILITY to shoot, they are FAR MORE likely to shot.
Raytheon stock is now a double-plus good buy.
Drone flies to check out minor crash site. It turns out to be road rage and one of them pulls out a gun.
"Voy a MATAR a usted"
"Ayudame, policia"
bang bang bang
Drone - "No don't shoot"
Nick Gillespie suddenly appears - "Hi I'm Nick Gillespie from Reason TV. Unarmed drones can't shoot dogs, but it can violate your privacy."
I have a question for you guys. If you saw a major accident right in front of your house, would you call 911, then press one for drone, or press two for a police officer? I'm obviously going to press 3 for Korean in the language menu, because I'll get help faster that way. Press one for English in LA and you're dead.
What I don't get is how a drone saves manpower. Somebody still has to fly the drone, right?
When you elect Progressives you choose to have a nanny state a government for the sake of government, chaos and failure.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l6octUJHZ9Y
Relax, it's just a movie with warning msg at the end to act.
When a drone is dispatched in response to a 911 call, what exactly is the drone expected to do once it arrives? Can it perform the Heimlich maneuver on a choking child? Can it perform CPR on someone who has just had a heart attack? Can it stop bleeding from a serious wound? Can it shoot and/or capture home invasion criminals? Inquiring minds want some answers.