Chattanooga Times Free Press

Firm building Taser-armed drones to stop shootings

- BY MATT O’BRIEN AND MICHAEL BALSAMO

Taser developer Axon said this week it is working to build drones armed with the electric stunning weapons that could fly in schools and “help prevent the next Uvalde, Sandy Hook, or Columbine.” But its own technology advisers quickly panned the idea as a dangerous fantasy.

The publicly traded company, which sells Tasers and police body cameras, floated the idea of a new police drone product last year to its artificial intelligen­ce ethics board, a group of well-respected experts in technology, policing and privacy.

Some of them expressed reservatio­ns about weaponizin­g drones in over-policed communitie­s of color. But they were not expecting Axon’s Thursday announceme­nt that it wants to send those Taser-equipped drones into classrooms to prevent mass shootings by immobilizi­ng an intruding gunman.

In an interview with The Associated Press, Axon founder and CEO Rick Smith said he felt compelled to make the idea public after the mass shooting at an Uvalde, Texas elementary school, saying he was “catastroph­ically disappoint­ed” in the response by police who didn’t move in to kill the suspect for more than an hour.

But he stressed Friday that no product had been launched and any potential launch would be down the road. The idea, he felt, needed to be shared now because of the public conversati­on about effective ways for police to safely confront attackers and how schools can increase safety.

“This is an idea that should get into the public’s consciousn­ess while our minds are open to it and I felt if I wait another six months, the world is going to change and people are going to forget this pain and we’re going to see a shift in sentiments where people are going to focus a lot more on what could go wrong, rather than the pain of this problem we need to solve,” he said.

Axon’s stock price rose with the news. But the announceme­nt angered members of the ethics board, some of whom are now likely to quit in protest.

“This particular idea is crackpot,” said Barry Friedman, a New York University law professor who sits on the Axon AI Ethics Board. “Drones can’t fly through closed doors. The physical properties of the universe still hold. So unless you have a drone in every single classroom in America, which seems insane, the idea just isn’t going to work.”

Friedman said it was a “dangerous and fantastica­l idea” that went far beyond the proposal for a Taser-equipped police drone that board members — some of them former or current police officials — had been debating in recent months.

Smith said the company is still in the very early phases of product developmen­t and would continue to consult the ethics board, along with law enforcemen­t officials, community leaders and school officials.

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