One of two Digidogs that New York police will start using soon. A previous robot police dog in the city was derided by critics as creepy and dystopian. Photo / AP
New York City officials have unveiled three new high-tech policing devices this week, including a robotic dog that critics called creepy when it first joined the police pack two years ago.
The new devices, which also include a GPS tracker for stolen cars and a cone-shaped security robot, will be rolled out in a manner that is “transparent, consistent and always done in close collaboration with the people we serve,” said police Commissioner Keechant Sewell.
He joined mayor Eric Adams and other officials at a Times Square press conference where the security robot and the mechanical Digidog were displayed.
“Digidog is out of the pound,” said Adams, a Democrat and former police officer. “Digidog is now part of the toolkit that we are using.”
The city’s first robot police dog was leased in 2020 by Adams’ predecessor, former mayor Bill de Blasio, but the contract was cut short after critics derided it as creepy and dystopian.
Adams said he won’t bow to anti-robot dog pressure.
“A few loud people were opposed to it and we took a step back,” he said. “That is not how I operate. I operate on looking at what’s best for the city.”
He said the remote-controlled, 32kg Digidog would be deployed in risky situations such as hostage standoffs starting this northern summer.
“If you have a barricaded suspect, if you have someone that’s inside a building that is armed, instead of sending police in there, you send Digidog in there. So these are smart ways of using good technologies.”
The tracking system called StarChase will allow police to launch a GPS tag that will attach itself to a stolen car so officers can track it. The New York Police Department’s pilot programme for using the system will last 90 days.
The Autonomous Security Robot, which Adams compared to a Roomba remote vacuum cleaner, will be deployed inside the Times Square subway station in a seven-month pilot starting this summer, police officials said.
The device, used in shopping centres for several years, will at first be joined by a human partner.
Civil libertarians and police reform advocates questioned the need for high-tech devices.
“This latest announcement is just the most recent example of how Mayor Adams allows unmitigated overspending of the NYPD’s massively bloated budget,” said Ileana Mendez-Penate, programme director of Communities United for Police Reform.
“The NYPD is buying robot dogs and other fancy tech while New Yorkers can’t access food stamps because city agencies are short-staffed, and New Yorkers are getting evicted because they can’t access their right to counsel.”
Albert Fox Cahn, executive director of the Surveillance Technology Oversight Project, said: “The NYPD is turning bad science fiction into terrible policing. New York deserves real safety, not a knockoff RoboCop.”