Orlando Sentinel

Police use robots for hazard situations

Devices are getting larger, stronger

- By Ian King

While Silicon Valley touts new robots that will greet you at the airport, deliver Cheetos to your hotel room or get you a pizza in a hurry, other machines have had more-serious jobs for decades.

Take Northrop Grumman Remotec’s products. The robotics division of the defense contractor started life more than 20 years ago as a maker of machines that move radioactiv­e materials around government research labs. From there, the devices evolved into bomb-disposal aids, and were sent into other situations that the military or law enforcemen­t deemed too risky for humans.

The Remotec bots were also given the ability to rip open a car, sniff out hazardous chemicals, cut a vest off a suicide bomber, blast an explosive with water to render it safe and fire guns at people. They can see in the dark, climb stairs, communicat­e with hostages and hostage takers, and lift more than the weight of an average person with ease.

In addition to their use in Israel and Iraq by the military, more than 400 police department­s in the U.S. have them.

For the California Highway Patrol and other law enforcemen­t agencies nationwide, robots were one of the tools they acquired in the aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks in 2001. The CHP team charged with keeping the state capitol safe uses a Northrop Grumman robot it got in 2005 for bomb disposal and other security tasks.

“Unfortunat­ely, there are bad guys that are planting, or making these things, and they see us and what we do in terms of how we handle these packages, and what they are continuall­y trying to do is find out ways to circumvent our technology,” said Sgt. Dave Kessler, who heads the CHP’s bombdispos­al unit. “The need for this technology is there, and the need for further, more advanced technology, is always there.”

In an assault course at the back of Northrop Grumman Corp.’s plant in Clinton, Tenn., the latest robot, the FX, climbed stairs and squeezed through narrow spaces with ease, despite its 900-pound bulk. Built with feed-back from customers, it is much larger than predecesso­rs and has an arm capable of almost balletic articulati­on — even while lifting a car door by grasping the thin window frame.

“In the past, a robot could pick up normally 100 pounds,’’ said Walt Werner, director of Northrop Grumman Remotec. “Some of the bombs that have been placed in cars are much heavier.”

The bomb planted in New York’s Times Square in 2010 was too heavy for robots to pick up, he noted.

It’s dangerous work, even for robots. When the FX rolled out to the test range, it passed an older model still showing the damage it sustained trying to defuse a bomb in Elizabeth, N.J., in 2016. Northrop Grumman says its robots won’t be left alone to make the life-or-death decisions that their human operators sometimes have to make.

“There’s just too many steps, too many issues involved there in terms of safety and ramificati­ons to actions to just send a robot,” said the CHP’s Kessler. “You need the human element involved.”

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