An Israeli Company Is Hawking Its Self-Launching Drone System to U.S. Police Departments

A Louisiana sheriff’s department has been testing the drone system, which is already used by the Israeli police and many settlements.

Illustration: The Intercept; Photos: Menahem Kahana/AFP via Getty Images, "Baton Rouge - Capitol Gardens" by Dennis Flax. Used under CC BY 2.0
Delaney Nolan, The Intercept
Delaney Nolan, The Intercept
Delaney Nolan is a freelance journalist based in New Orleans. Her reporting focuses on climate and the environment, housing and displacement, and where these issues intersect....
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An Israeli drone company is proselytizing to American police departments about an autonomous drone system that can automatically launch police drones to fly to the sites of suspected crimes. One sheriff’s department in Louisiana has repeatedly tested the system, called Orion, which is already in use by the Israeli national police and, since October 7, many Israeli settlements, according to the company’s founder.

Created by the Israeli company High Lander, Orion allows users to direct hundreds of drones at once by automating them to navigate and perform actions without user input. The software system turns drones into “next-generation security guards,” according to an Orion brochure.

In February, High Lander held a demo event in Baton Rouge to showcase the “drone-in-a-box solution,” which the East Baton Rouge Sherrif’s Office first tested out last June. “The system will be a game changer for the fight against crime in Baton Rouge,” High Lander wrote in a LinkedIn post about the event, which was attended by officers from around the country.

The company has used its pilot program in Louisiana to encourage other police agencies to check out Orion, and its February event in Louisiana was just one part of a tour that included stops in San Diego, Phoenix, and Miami, according to LinkedIn posts.

Orion’s capabilities are startling. A police force could have drones automatically launch from charging stations when triggered by “events like gunshots, burglaries, and car accidents.” Once they deploy, the drones can perform pre-set tasks: releasing cargo; relaying live video feeds; identifying and searching for people, objects, or vehicles using AI and thermal sensors; and making announcements over loudspeaker. If the system gets multiple calls, Orion can automatically choose which to prioritize. 

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Delaney Nolan is a freelance journalist based in New Orleans. Her reporting focuses on climate and the environment, housing and displacement, and where these issues intersect. Her work has appeared in Al Jazeera English, Mother Jones, BBC, Oxford American, and elsewhere and has received support from the Economic Hardship Reporting Project, International Women's Media Foundation, and others.