Good Thinking

StarChase tech lets police shoot fugitive cars with GPS tags

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The StarChase laser sighting system (green light) sits within the GPS tag-shooting cannon
The StarChase laser sighting system (green light) sits within the GPS tag-shooting cannon
The cannon, in its closed state (left) and one of the GPS tags

Police car chases are extremely dangerous, not only for the officers involved, but also for any innocent passers-by whom the feeing car crashes into. The StarChase system, however, is designed to make those chases safer. Instead of pursuing fugitive vehicles, police can just shoot them with GPS tags.

At the heart of the system is a compressed-air cannon and a laser sighting system, installed in the front grille of a police car. Using a simple console-mounted control panel, officers can activate that cannon to shoot an adhesive GPS "tag" at the back of the other vehicle. Each unit, not including the tags, costs approximately US$5,000.

The cannon, in its closed state (left) and one of the GPS tags

Once the fugitive vehicle has been tagged, its whereabouts can be tracked by a central dispatcher, who can coordinate the movements of other cruisers to head it off. The pursuing officer can drop back to a discreet distance, hopefully causing the fugitive driver to slow down, as they're no longer trying to outrun the police car.

The StarChase system is currently being tried out by police forces in Iowa and Florida.

Source: StarChase via CNET

Police car chases are extremely dangerous, not only for the officers involved, but also for any innocent passers-by whom the feeing car crashes into. The StarChase system, however, is designed to make those chases safer. Instead of pursuing fugitive vehicles, police can just shoot them with GPS tags.

At the heart of the system is a compressed-air cannon and a laser sighting system, installed in the front grille of a police car. Using a simple console-mounted control panel, officers can activate that cannon to shoot an adhesive GPS "tag" at the back of the other vehicle. Each unit, not including the tags, costs approximately US$5,000.

The cannon, in its closed state (left) and one of the GPS tags

Once the fugitive vehicle has been tagged, its whereabouts can be tracked by a central dispatcher, who can coordinate the movements of other cruisers to head it off. The pursuing officer can drop back to a discreet distance, hopefully causing the fugitive driver to slow down, as they're no longer trying to outrun the police car.

The StarChase system is currently being tried out by police forces in Iowa and Florida.

Source: StarChase via CNET

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13 comments
Greg P
The best option is to have quadcopters with camera tracking devices follow cars and then have several of them that can detect if occupants leave the car and track and follow several occupants. this would mean no car chases, and being able to follow and track people that have stolen a car and then discarded it to run on foot.
Air highways need to be defined for drones / UAVs, so that we can get these devices in use quicker.
Tommie le Roux
What a good idea, get it commercial ASAP so that it could be used all over the world and make it as cheap as possible.
Riaanh
Haven't we seen this one in a James Bond movie a few years ago?
Excellent tegnology though - you can run, but you can never hide!
Captain Danger
I know cops are supposed to be the good guys, I know polices chases are not good and if you are running from the cops there is a chance innocent people will be hurt. that being said I still can't help but side with the poor bastard being chased. Every time I see a chase on TV I am on the side of the guy running. Here in Ontario Can. you cannot have a radar detector , The speed limit on the highways is a ridiculous 62 mph, fines are very high and the cop's always seems to be out in force with speed traps. Now we have a law that says' if you are 30 mph over the limit you are "racing" , the police can confiscate your vehicle and leave you on the side of the road and you are liable for a 10/k fine. Similar to the "hooligan law" in Australia Loz Blain wrote about. Having out run the police twice (back in my younger days) I always like to have the option of just putting the hammer down and going for it. With devices such as this it just makes it that much riskier. Many will think that this is a good thing but to me it is just one more nail in the coffin if personal liberty. My heart grows heavy reading stories such as these. Time to youtube Ghost Rider.
Buzzclick
As with other policing technologies, like radar, the speeding perps will find a way to skirt around this (by coating the rear of their cars with silicone?) It cannot be easy to hit a moving target either. At 120+mph the projectile would also have to compensate for the turbulence.
Martin Rayner
What an amazingly simple but effective idea. Don't like the cost, but the simplicity of this is inspirational. Now we need to adapt it to personal GPS tags to take out the individual shoot outs.
Bill B
This flies right in the face of a recent high court ruling that stated that a warrant is required before attaching a GPS tagging device to a vehicle.
Mark_Pavlichenko
Say... that not easily bypass using a GPS blocker ? i not sure but doesn't people sell that kind stuff in china.
pmshah
What would be the cost of each device ? I am sure the "attachment" would be pretty low so all the ones that bounced off would have to be written off, finders keepers? What kind of impact would these devices survive?
Moving away from the current discussion I sometimes feel it might be a good idea to bring back technologies developed by so called "aborigines" like the literally multi-threaded device they would throw at incapacitate the fast escaping animal by wrapping it up ! May be the foot chase would become much easier !
Slowburn
$5000 for a potato gun? Besides with the way thing are going they will just tell the fleeing car to shutdown or drive into a bridge piling.