Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Police In Delta, B.C., Using GPS Darts To Track Vehicles That Flee

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Jan, 2017 10:11 AM
    DELTA, B.C. — A police department in British Columbia's Lower Mainland is using technology that looks like it is taken from the latest Batman movie to track fleeing vehicles.
     
    Police in Delta have begun using GPS projectiles fired from the grills of their vehicles to track those who won't stop.
     
    With an increasing number of vehicles fleeing officers, Delta police say they began researching options to deal with the problem early last year.
     
    The police department began working with StarChase Pursuit Management Technology, which has developed a GPS projectile that officers can fire at a vehicle to track its location until it stops.
     
    The Delta Police Foundation agreed to fund the project and over the past several months, the police department began working with the company to equip eight vehicles with the technology.
     
     
    The department says the projectiles are fired from a compressed air launcher attached to the grill of a police vehicle.
     
    It has been tested, officers have been trained, and the police department says the technology is in place to use.
     
    "We are now looking forward to seeing this technology in action," police Chief Neil Dubord said in a statement.
     
    "However, we do recognize there is no one tool that serves as a 'silver bullet' to solve any one issue. I do believe it is incumbent on us to employ advanced technology options that may assist us in our efforts to be effective at doing our job while mitigating risk to the public."
     
    He says the police department will assess the effectiveness of the projectiles over the next year in tracking fleeing vehicles.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Highway Washout Cuts Off Access To Vancouver Island Communities

    Highway Washout Cuts Off Access To Vancouver Island Communities
    UCLUELET, B.C. — DriveBC says a highway washout is cutting off access to the west coast of Vancouver Island.

    Highway Washout Cuts Off Access To Vancouver Island Communities

    Police Say Two Men Arrested, Two Hospitalized After Violence At Vancouver Home

    Police Say Two Men Arrested, Two Hospitalized After Violence At Vancouver Home
    Emergency response team, negotiators and officers with dogs responded to a call on Friday morning

    Police Say Two Men Arrested, Two Hospitalized After Violence At Vancouver Home

    B.C. Emergency Service Says No One Factor Influences Ambulance Response Times

    Linda Lupini, the organization's executive vice-president, says across the province, average response times have held steady in 2016.

    B.C. Emergency Service Says No One Factor Influences Ambulance Response Times

    Surrey, B.C. Woman Miraculously Rescued After Her SUV Plunges Off Cliff In A Swollen Creek

    Surrey, B.C. Woman Miraculously Rescued After Her SUV Plunges Off Cliff In A Swollen Creek
    Surrey resident told police she thought she was going to die as her car went over

    Surrey, B.C. Woman Miraculously Rescued After Her SUV Plunges Off Cliff In A Swollen Creek

    Kamloops, B.C. Mother Kills Baby Before Writing University Exam And Stuffing Body In Box

    Kamloops, B.C. Mother Kills Baby Before Writing University Exam And Stuffing Body In Box
     A mother who drowned her newborn son in a sink before leaving her home to write a university exam has avoided time behind bars, though a judge described her actions as "abhorrent."

    Kamloops, B.C. Mother Kills Baby Before Writing University Exam And Stuffing Body In Box

    Death Highlights Need To Support Older Teens: Children's Watchdog

    Death Highlights Need To Support Older Teens: Children's Watchdog
    Bernard Richard says the latest case his office investigated involving the death of a 19-year-old aboriginal woman in Surrey shows the need for change.

    Death Highlights Need To Support Older Teens: Children's Watchdog