
Menlo Park police used a StarChase GPS tracking system during a pursuit involving a stolen car. Officers pursued the vehicle and then deployed the system, which attaches to the suspect’s car and provides real-time location data. A replica gun was also found in the vehicle. Sgt. Allen Swanson demonstrated that officers target the vehicle, send a signal that launches a projectile designed to stick to the car, and then monitor the device’s tracking information. The system has about a 60 percent success rate of sticking to the vehicle, but it helps make pursuits safer by allowing officers to catch suspects without endangering the public. The department has used StarChase since 2022, and other agencies also use it.
"Video released by the Menlo Park Police Department shows officers pursuing the vehicle before deploying a GPS tracking system known as "StarChase," which attaches to a suspect's car and allows officers to monitor its location. Police said a replica gun was also found in the vehicle. Sgt. Allen Swanson demonstrated how the system works. Officers target a vehicle and send a signal that launches a projectile designed to stick to a vehicle. Once attached, the device provides real-time tracking data."
""Ideally it's like the situation we just had, where we can track them from a safe distance, and then once we have a good safe tactical advantage, we can move in and take them into custody," Swanson said. Sgt. Swanson said their agency is finding devices have about a 60 percent success rate of sticking to a suspect's vehicle there. Despite that limitation, he said they have proven useful."
""It gives us an opportunity to make the situations of pursuits safer. We're always looking for an opportunity to catch the bad guy but not endanger the public any more than we possibly have to," he said. Menlo Park police have been using the StarChase system since 2022, Sgt. Swanson said. Other police departments also use the technology, including the San Francisco Police Department."
Read at ABC7 San Francisco
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