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Sunday, May 4, 2025

New drones to police Carnival bands

by

Rishard Khan
2257 days ago
20190227
Police Commissioner Gary Griffith, right, addresses members of the media as ASP Anand Ramesar looks on during the weekly police briefing at the Police Administration Building, Port-of-Spain, yesterday.

Police Commissioner Gary Griffith, right, addresses members of the media as ASP Anand Ramesar looks on during the weekly police briefing at the Police Administration Building, Port-of-Spain, yesterday.

ABRAHAM DIAZ

The T&T Po­lice Ser­vice will be mak­ing full use of tech­nol­o­gy for next week’s ma­jor Car­ni­val fes­tiv­i­ties.

Speak­ing dur­ing yes­ter­day week­ly brief­ing at the Po­lice Ad­min­is­tra­tion Build­ing in Port of Spain, Com­mis­sion­er of Po­lice Gary Grif­fith said of­fi­cers will be us­ing a new state of the art drone to help with re­mote sur­veil­lance of the cel­e­bra­tions.

The Silent Fal­con un­manned aer­i­al ve­hi­cle (UAV or drone) will re­place the toy drones cur­rent­ly in use, he said.

“One of the things again that you would see dif­fer­ent­ly is the con­cept of drones. Now the drones we would have seen in Trinidad and To­ba­go over the last few years, those are the drones you would usu­al­ly buy in a Toys R Us or Wal­mart store.

“The con­cept of the drone we are go­ing to be util­is­ing here is some­thing that’s go­ing to be a first in Trinidad and To­ba­go,” Grif­fith said.

He said while they were im­ple­ment­ing them dur­ing Car­ni­val sea­son they will pri­mar­i­ly be used to se­cure the na­tion’s bor­ders.

The drone is a so­lar-elec­tric un­manned air­craft and in­cludes a ground con­trol sta­tion. It re­quires two op­er­a­tors to func­tion—one to con­trol the air­craft and the oth­er its pay­load, such as cam­eras.

It has a range of up to 100 kilo­me­tres and has a set-up time of 30 min­utes and a tran­sit time of 20 min­utes to pre­pare in-be­tween flights.

“This will turn night in­to day. It would be able to lock on­to cer­tain things, pick up on cer­tain in­for­ma­tion, feed­ing in­for­ma­tion to the Op­er­a­tional Com­mand Cen­tre in re­al time and this would play a phe­nom­e­nal part in ac­tu­al­ly deal­ing with look­ing at every­thing that is tak­ing place for Car­ni­val,” the CoP said.

At the time, he was un­able to give an ex­act fig­ure on how many drones will be used but in­di­cat­ed there will be ei­ther three or four.

The drones, he said, were much cheap­er to em­ploy than the use of he­li­copters and un­like oth­er meth­ods of air sur­veil­lance could pro­vide in­for­ma­tion in re­al time.

Grif­fith al­so said the TTPS will work along­side the de­vel­op­ers for the “D’ Junc­tion” mo­bile app to give re­al-time up­dates on band lo­ca­tions, as well as show users the near­est po­lice sta­tion, post, or pa­trol. Founder and de­vel­op­er of the D’ Junc­tion app, Ria Karim, said the most im­por­tant fea­ture the app of­fers is a band track­ing mech­a­nism.

“It re­al­ly was de­vel­oped out of ex­pe­ri­ence and out of the un­der­stand­ing of a glar­ing gap, a miss­ing link in terms of peo­ple be­ing able to safe­ly and se­cure­ly nav­i­gate our towns and cities dur­ing Car­ni­val time, es­pe­cial­ly in an en­vi­ron­ment which may be un­fa­mil­iar to them,” she said.


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