Robots have cure for eroticized ragebeen used for everything from greeting bank customers to grabbing a slice of pizza -- and now they seem to be venturing further into law enforcement.
A six-hour police standoff in a Southern California desert ended on Sept. 8 when a robot was used by police to take away the rifle of an attempted murder suspect.
The special weapons team from the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department made the call after the suspect, 52-year-old Ray B. Bunge, refused to surrender. He has since been charged with attempted murder, criminal threats, assault with a deadly weapon / firearm, robbery and felony vandalism.
SEE ALSO: 100 tiny robots replaced humans in this queue for the iPhone 7
During the standoff, Bunge was lying in a "dark open field" in the desert of Antelope Valley, California, when the robot stealthily, quietly snatched the gun sitting next to his feet, according to a Facebook post from the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department.
Police had lost track of Bunge before using a helicopter and special weapons team to find him in a dirt area surrounded by shrubs and fence wiring. That's when they tried distracting Bunge and sending in the robot.
"He looked up and realized his gun was gone and he was exposed."
"While his attention was focused on the vehicles in front of him, the team deployed a robot from behind the suspect’s position," the Facebook post explains.
The robot picked up the gun without Bunge noticing before pulling away the fence wiring that had been covering him. At that moment, Bunge finally gave up.
"He looked up and realized his gun was gone and he was exposed," the post states. "The suspect surrendered to the team without incident."
The use of robots by police has been a point of controversy since Dallas police used a robot to kill a suspect who had murdered five police officers in July.
While robots have been used by police to dispose of bombs for years, using them as a killing weapon seemed to set a new precedent -- something confirmed by Peter Singer, a robotics expert with the think tank New America Foundation.
Yes, this is 1st use of robot in this way in policing. Marcbot has been ad hoc used this way by troops in Iraq. https://t.co/FfrsgLS2x1
— Peter W. Singer (@peterwsinger) July 8, 2016
A UC Davis law professor who has studied American law enforcement's use of technology told the Associated Press that using a robot to kill could blur the lines of appropriate or ethical use.
"If lethally equipped robots can be used in this situation, when else can they be used?" Elizabeth Joh said. "Extreme emergencies shouldn't define the scope of more ordinary situations where police may want to use robots that are capable of harm."
One thing's for sure: There are reportedly hundreds of police robots across the U.S. and no telling what they'll be used for next. The Los Angeles Sheriff's Department said this was one of "very few known" instances where a remotely controlled robot was used to take a weapon.
"Although this method cannot be used in every incident, the use of robot technology in this instance has proven the safety of all involved," the department wrote in its Facebook post.
Two huge drills take a muchLike Apple's HomePod, Sonos One and Amazon Echo Dot also leave marksTwitter pranksters are spreading a bug that crashes iPhonesBlack Panther's Wakanda reveals the limits on the black imaginationAnyone can use Facebook to boost a message. Even Russian agents.Leaked Wikileaks chats reveal proSnapchat's 'High School Shooting' featured story was a new test for Snap MapsEverything you need to know about Black Panther before 'Black Panther'Razor's Turbo Jetts are basically motorized HeelysApple's iPhone X sales woes are affecting Samsung too'Black Panther' has two endThis 'Black Panther' proposal was perfect, except for one tiny detail'System Shock' remake on hiatusBeware! Slack leaks are the new email leaksLego unveils 'Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom' sets and we're pretty darn excitedCoinbase mistakenly drains some users' bank accountsNow juice stores are giving out Bitcoin as a competition prizeBerkshire Hathaway vice chairman just called Bitcoin 'noxious poison'Russian bots try to control Florida shooting conversationOlympic skater attempts to win judges with 'Game of Thrones' routine Girl hilariously turns the tables when her roommate tries to prank her Netflix's "The Crown" recreated these real Princess Diana outfits Everything coming to Disney+ in December 2020 Everything coming to Hulu in December 2020 HBO reportedly leaving Amazon Prime in 2021 to make way for HBO Max Facebook moderators blast Zuckerberg, claim he's risking their lives for profits We read Obama's 'A Promised Land' so you don't have to, but you should There's a Sexy Jon Snow costume because Halloween is coming 'Star Wars: Tales from the Galaxy’s Edge' VR delivers what Disney’s theme parks can’t What happens to Trump's Twitter account after the transfer of power? The coolest MacOS Big Sur tips and tricks Can you spot the snake hiding in this photo? GoDaddy accidentally helped hackers mess with cryptocurrency sites 8 ways climate change is already impacting you This WiFi router is a Black Friday steal. Experts say it's a security risk. What Thanksgiving produce looks like before it hits store shelves Even North Korea is making fun of Donald Trump's tweets Senators warn Facebook, Twitter at post HBO Max's 'Fresh Prince' reunion is a blueprint for streaming services 'Myst' (yes, that 'Myst') is coming back as an Oculus VR game in December
2.8043s , 8286.234375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【cure for eroticized rage】,New Knowledge Information Network