How police used robot, explosives to take out Dallas sniper
07/12/2016 12:47 pm PDT
via KIAH:
DALLAS -- (KIAH) -- Dallas Police Chief David Brown gave an order to his SWAT team after a 45-minute gun battle and two hours of negotiating with a sniper targeting police officers.
He told them to come up with a creative plan to neutralize the suspect without putting another officer in the line of fire.
In the time it took Chief Brown to get back from updating the public about the ongoing battle, his officers had hatched a plan. It would keep them out of the line of fire and take out the suspect.
“They improvised this whole idea in about 15, 20 minutes — extraordinary,” Chief Brown says.
By the time the chief gave the go ahead, at least two officers had already been killed, and several more gravely wounded. Three more would later die from their injuries.
The sniper was targeting police officers, particularly white officers.
Chief Brown made the final call and carried out a plan law enforcement experts say they've never seen done by local officials: Use a robot and a pound of C-4 explosive to take the sniper out.
Chief Brown says says the robot was used in the building where Johnson was still sniping, intent on continuing to kill.
They'd had the robot for a long while. The Remotec Androx Mark V A-1, manufactured by Northrup Grumman, was purchased by the department in 2008. The robot, which cost $151,000, sustained minor damage to the extension arm and is still functional, the chief says.
Chief Brown says his officers were up against a military trained suspect holed up on the second floor of El Centro Community College building in downtown Dallas.
Eventually the robot was maneuvered behind a “brick wall” with the suspect on the other side, the chief says. The robot was carrying the one pound payload, ready to be detonated.
“A pound of C-4 runs about $20,” if bought in bulk, explosive expert Matt Barnett of Bonetti Explosives told CNN.
The C-4 would likely be placed as close to the wall by the robot as possible for full effect, and quietly moved behind the wall so the sniper wouldn't notice. If the police could do that, they could likely take out their attacker.
“There are two things that'll kill you with explosives,” Barnett says. “You have over-pressure and fragmentation.”
“Fragmentation is the one we worry about most and usually that's the number one killer with explosives,” Barnett says. “The fragments becomes like little missiles.”
Over-pressure would burst blood vessels and make a person dazed and confused, Barnett explained. They may not appear to be injured at first. But inside they are bleeding out.
Dallas police were hoping their tactic would work against a suspect who had taken so many lives. It did.
The chief faced some criticism for using what is seen by some as war tactic in a civilian setting.
But he was unequivocal when asked whether he would make that choice again.
“This wasn't an ethical dilemma, for me. I'd do it again to save our officers,” Brown says.
The 790-pound robot can be mounted with a variety of sensors, cameras, and attachments. Its arm, once fully extended, can lift 60 pounds and the end can grip with 50 pounds of force, according to manufacturer documents.
It is capable of riding over ditches, over rough terrain, climbing stairs and can traverse through openings up to 24 inches wide and obstacles up to 16 inches tall, according to the manufacturer.
The tactical robot has a 26x optical zoom, a 12x digital zoom and two-way communication, enabling it to send back real time status, positioning and images.
Robots are common inside police departments, but generally used to disable explosive devices or disorient and incapacitate suspects that are barricaded.
It generally carries a flashbang, a device that emits a bright light and loud sound. Sometimes these robots are used to place an explosive near a bomb in order to disarm it via explosion.
But there are far more uses for the robot, depending on what accessories you choose to pair it with.
The Dallas chief says he'd use the robot or other unconventional tactics again in a similar situation.
“I would use any tool necessary to save our officers' lives,” Brown says. “And I'm not ashamed to say it.”
FULL STORY: How police used robot, explosives to take out Dallas sniper - KIAH