Las Vegas Review-Journal

Police to use drones to monitor Strip celebratio­n

- By Nicole Raz Las Vegas Review-journal

Las Vegas police will use drones to watch over New Year’s Eve celebratio­ns on the Strip, technology the department was not able to use the night of the Oct. 1 mass shooting.

Officer David Martel said HOPE AND HEALING the department will use two drones — a Yuneec H520 and a Yuneec Typhoon 4 — to monitor crowds, identify suspicious packages and track any unusual activity on Strip

properties.

Martel said the unmanned aerial vehicles also will check hotel windows for anyone who might try to copy the events of Oct. 1, when a gunman shattered the windows of his 32nd-floor suite at Mandalay Bay and sprayed bullets on 22,000 concertgoe­rs at a nearby outdoor music festival. The gunman killed 58 people and injured more than 500 others before

DRONES

killing himself.

“The biggest thing is to provide support to our officers and to provide a better aerial view,” Martel said Wednesday. “It’s hard to get the helicopter along the Strip. Drones arealotsma­ller,andyou’reableto get into tighter areas.”

Those tighter areas might be especially helpful to get a closer look at unaccompan­ied packages, for example, he said.

Having the drones monitor crowds from an aerial view also will help police better position barricades and other pedestrian control devices, he said.

Metro drone use

Metro purchased five drones from Yuneec this year for $15,000. Martel estimated the drones arrived Sept. 27, just days before the mass shooting. They were still in unopened boxes in a hangar at the North Las Vegas airport when the shooting occurred.

He headed to the hangar as quickly ashecouldw­henhegotwo­rdofthe shooting Oct. 1, hoping to use the drones to support first responders.

But the drones arrived to the department fresh from the manufactur­er. The batteries weren’t charged. Martel said it would have taken an hour to get them fully charged, and the gunfire lasted for about 10 minutes.

Had Martel been able to take a fully charged drone with him the night of the shooting, he said he would have used it to locate people who needed help — at least one of the drones is equipped with thermal imaging sensors.

Others have a much broader vision for how drones could have helped police address the shooter on Oct.1 — though current policy and technology would have to evolve to support this vision.

Active-shooter situations

The day after the shooting, Martel used one of the department’s drones to create a 3-D map of the crime scene.

“You can kind of re-enact a scene, in some aspects,” he said. “It’s documentin­g evidence,” like the locations of shell casings.

Had Martel gotten to the scene of the crime much, much earlier, he said the drone could have been used to gather informatio­n about what was happening and where.

Metro initially estimated that it took 72 minutes from the first 911 call for law enforcemen­t to the moment police breached the shooter’s hotel room on the 32nd floor of Mandalay Bay, though the timeline is still under review.

Police began searching the hotel’s 29th floor before determinin­g the gunman was on the 32nd floor.

“Think about how useful a drone might have been if we have situations like this (Las Vegas shooting) now for large events,” Brian Levin, director of The Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University-san Bernardino, told the Los Angeles Daily News in October. “You have a guy on the 32nd floor (of a hotel), a drone could have provided real-time intelligen­ce and surveillan­ce to what’s going on.”

However, knowing exactly where the gunman was might have been hard to pinpoint, Martel said, because every building has different ways of classifyin­g levels. For instance, some resorts might mark the ground level as lobby instead of as the first floor, or the second level as mezzanine.

A broader vision

Ryan Wallace, a professor at Polk State College in Lakeland, Florida, envisions a much broader use for drones in situations like the Oct. 1 shooting.

“When you look at the (gunman Stephen) Paddock scenario, you have about 10 minutes of serious carnage. If you have a distractio­n

created by a drone, you could have bought critical moments that could have saved lives,” Wallace told the Review-journal.

In an October paper Wallace co-authored with Jon Loffi, a professor at Oklahoma State University, in the Internatio­nal Journal of Aviation, Aeronautic­s and Aerospace, Wallace and Loffi advocated using drones for tactical operations, and even equipping drones with nonlethal equipment, like tear gas or smoke canisters.

“It’s a very unanticipa­ted type of response from law enforcemen­t,” Wallace said. “When you’re dealing with any scenario, and especially one as well-planned as Paddock had clearly taken the effort to plan, an unexpected tactical response, like a drone, probably would have created a distractio­n.”

For those few seconds, the gunman may have redirected his fire to shoot at the drone, or if he was impacted with something like tear gas he may have taken a break from firing at all.

Surprise responses can allow “a

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