Tuesday, September 16, 2025

Security for All CEOs and Celebrities Must Be Increased, Police Drones and Robocops






To start with all threats can be captured and taken back to source.  Zerto toerance there is able to deeply supress the mentally unstable.  Exactly this ended the nasty hobby of freak phone calls.

So let us end the nasty hobby of making death threats.


We still have the mentally unstable who do make themslves known.  All presented so far were obvious commitment prospects.  And not because they espouse an aberrant political position.  It is because they are contemplating irrational choices and threatening to act on them.  No one really cares if you are an enthusiastic NAZI if you are also harmless.  They do care when you start collecting weapons..


Security for All CEOs and Celebrities Must Be Increased, Police Drones and Robocops

September 12, 2025 by Brian Wang


The killing of the United Healthcare CEO, assassination of Charlie Kirk and attempted assassination of Trump and many other incidents indicate that companies must step up security expenditures for CEOs and top executives and celebrities must be increased.


Tesla only spends about $3.3 million on security for Elon Musk who has received thousands of death threats.

https://www.nextbigfuture.com/2025/09/security-for-all-ceos-and-celebrities-must-be-increased-police-drones-and-robocops.html

There will need to be drones and systems monitoring rooftops and able to monitor and rapidly respond and possibly intervene with shooting threats.



There are also drones being used for police enhancement and first response.

We can look at current and planned drones of Anduril, Skydio, DJI, AeroVironment, and emerging players like Shield AI and Teal Drones. Drone will be integrated into law enforcement, anti-assassination strategies and counter-drone defenses. We will look at budgetary considerations. My analysis draws on operational deployments, technological trends, and real-world conflicts like Ukraine-Russia and Israel-Iran, where drones have redefined infiltration, surveillance, and kinetic operations.

Current Global Use of Drones for Police Response EnhancementDrone as First Responder (DFR) Programs

Pioneered in the U.S. (e.g., by departments in Chula Vista, CA, and New York City), drones launch from rooftops or stations to arrive at 911 calls in under 4 minutes—often twice as fast as patrol cars—providing real-time video feeds to assess threats like active shooters or domestic disputes.





Tactical Crisis Response

Drones map accident scenes, track suspects in pursuits, and deliver payloads like defibrillators or negotiator phones. For instance, U.S. agencies use them in SWAT operations for overhead intel, improving outcomes in barricaded suspect scenarios.

Traffic and Crowd Control

Departments like Riverside PD in California use drones for efficient accident reconstruction, cutting investigation times from hours to minutes.

Anduril provides AI-integrated systems like the Lattice platform for autonomous threat detection in police ops.

Skydio offers self-flying drones for indoor/outdoor mapping.

DJI dominates with affordable quadcopters for basic surveillance, though U.S. agencies are shifting to domestic alternatives due to security concerns.

Future Planned Use of Drones in Law Enforcement

By 2030, drones will likely be ubiquitous in policing, evolving from tools to autonomous force multipliers integrated with AI, 5G/6G networks, and IoT ecosystems.

Projections indicate nearly every U.S. agency will adopt them, with global adoption following suit as costs dropping well below $5,000 per unit.

Widescale Anti-Assassination Monitoring, Deterrence, and Drone Intervention

Anti-assassination drone systems would form a layered air shield around high-value individuals (HVIs) or sites, drawing from military tactics but adapted for civilian contexts.

Persistent drone patrols using AI for loitering people, suspicious people or other drones. Swarms of micro-drones (like Anduril’s Altius-600) could create a 360-degree bubble around VIP convoys or events, integrating with ground sensors for facial recognition and threat profiling.



Counter-Drone Security Resisting Military Infiltration Drones

Counter-unmanned aerial systems (C-UAS) must evolve to handle sophisticated military drones, as seen in Ukraine (FPV drones account for 60-70% of Russian losses) and Israel-Iran (stealthy infiltrators for deep strikes).

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