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Jonathan Bastian Finding Fugitives... Fast
Officer.com, October 2006
by Jonathan Bastian



Finding Fugitives... Fast

The introduction to this column examined the technical aspect of thermal imagers. As promised, we now move into the real-life applications for this technology. While thermal imaging is quite an amazing technology, the reality is that if you can’t use it practically on the street, it really doesn’t matter. Officers’ cars and duty belts are already overloaded with stuff. Combine this with tight government budgets, and we can’t afford to buy expensive, useless equipment. One of the fastest ways a TI can earn your respect is to help you find a person who is either hiding from you or has fled from you, or has done both.

Why a TI?
Remember that the TI sees heat. Especially at night, this means the TI can be much more effective than a flashlight or spotlight. There are three main advantages the TI has over artificial light. The first is distance. A great flashlight might illuminate well to a range of 20 yards; a good thermal imager will view a human heat source from a range of 200 yards. Greater detection distance is clearly an advantage in locating and tracking the movements of a suspect, and it helps give you the upper hand.

The second advantage is that the TI detects heat. Even stupid criminals know how to hide from light: burglars wear dark clothing to make them harder to see at night. Fleeing criminals may hide in the shadows, knowing that it is more difficult for you to see them. However, most people do not understand how to hide their body heat. Think about the movie Predator. Arnold’s character covers himself with mud to hide his body heat from the Predator. Why? The Predator “sees” heat, so even hiding in the shadows was insufficient protection. A thermal imager works the same way: shadows aren’t enough; you actually have to hide your body heat. And few of the people we chase think like Arnold...

The third advantage is that a TI is passive - it receives energy rather than sending out energy like a flashlight. Because there is no energy leaving the TI, the suspect does not know if you are looking his way with a TI. Perhaps more importantly, an armed suspect cannot trace back the beam to figure out where you are, and open fire in your direction.

Real-life Situations?
You are still wondering, “So, what does this have to do with patrol work?” Read on:

Conclusion
Thermal imagers provide distinct advantages to police officers, especially at night. We can see the bad guy at a greater distance, regardless of light conditions, and without alerting him that we are watching. All of this combines to make it easier for us to confine, locate and arrest people who want to run and hide from us. That brings the advantage back to the good guys, where it belongs.

 



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