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How Tech Helps Law Enforcement
Today wraps Police Week on Capitol Hill where lawmakers and law enforcement come together with the shared goal of supporting the men and women who keep us safe. But there is another constituency increasingly playing a massive role: technologists. We take some time to examine two companies that are making that happen. Here’s everything we’ll cover this morning …
🚨FLOCK + PREPARED
🛩️ CLEAR THE AIR
📱AMERICAN AI DIPLOMACY
️ALFA is a platform sharing how policy and technology are interacting to make American life better. Do you have an idea or proposal that pulls society forward? Drop us a line at [email protected].

FLOCK SAFETY
We chatted with Flock Safety’s Chief Communications Officer, Josh Thomas about the company and their significant and growing contribution to public safety. Best known for their automated license plate reader (ALPR), Flock is on the leading edge of solving and preventing crimes.
What is Flock Safety?
“We have hardware and software – including drones and a litany of sensors (most notably the license plate readers) that we build and manufacture right here in America needed to solve and stop crime.”
Flock at Work.
Flock Safety operates in 5,000 cities and is involved in 10% of solved crimes.
The technology has helped provide the evidence to recover over 1,000 missing people – and that is just what has been publicly reported.
Flock’s license plate readers outside of Mar-a-Lago identified the vehicle of the second attempted assassin of President Trump, and police caught him right away.
In Roswell, GA, a report came in about a potentially armed suspect who had driven to a nearby town. A drone was launched immediately, located the vehicle, and tracked the suspect on foot using details like a neck tattoo. From 400 feet up, the drone confirmed his identity and guided police to make a safe, incident-free arrest. The suspect was carrying a loaded weapon.
Law Enforcement Impact.
“A lot of cities are experiencing a harder climate for law enforcement. It's harder to hire and retain people. And relative to the risk that a lot of law enforcement officers are undertaking, the pay can be challenging. It's just tough to recruit in the same way that it used to be. And so we think there's an opportunity here for technology to fill in the gap.”
“I just visited a very small Police Department in Texas, but the town is fast growing, and they have one detective total. When asked about resource and staffing needs he said ‘I want more flock technology because it makes my job significantly easier.’”
“From chiefs you hear – and this is a very nice compliment – that this is the greatest invention since DNA.”

PREPARED
We also spoke with the company, Prepared who builds AI-powered tools tailored to emergency responders, helping them save lives by improving outcomes when every second counts. Here’s how they described their work to us:
“America's emergency response professionals deserve best-in-class solutions to critical operational challenges that place undue burden on staff capacity and impact communities. Prepared’s Assistive AI is designed to supplement that capacity, supercharging the incredible work of the heroes of public safety and driving innovation with a forward-thinking, customer-centric, collaborative approach to building new technology. This approach ensures that American communities are served by the best technology, not just the best technology available to them.
“Our platform streamlines emergency response from end-to-end, starting before a 911 call even arrives and extending long after field responders have been dispatched:
Automatically triaging non-emergent calls to free up personnel to respond to the most critical emergencies.
Allowing call-takers to leverage the power of next-generation media, text, and translation, helping dispatchers find the calm in the chaos of numerous radio channels.
Ensuring agency leaders can better train & retain staff.
“Since public launch in 2021, we've partnered with over 1,000 public safety agencies in 49 states that protect over 90 million Americans, including Nashville, Baltimore, and El Paso. Our technology has been used to protect officers & victims during domestic incidents, help coordinate a volcano eruption response, rescue 14 people stranded on an ice floe, save lives using CPR, deliver babies, help solve murder investigations, rescue stranded climbers, and so, so much more.
“The real insight into why it all works—and how—comes from the people using it every day.”

Clear the Air
In January, Boom Supersonic successfully tested the first privately developed plane to break the sound the barrier. And they did it without a sonic boom reaching the ground. Commercial supersonic air travel is upon us. Now it’s time for government regulations to catch up. Fortunately, bicameral legislation was introduced this week to make supersonic travel over land legal, and ALFA broke down all the implications.

American AI Diplomacy
President Trump's Middle East tour has included an unprecedented wave of American technology deals across the Gulf region, proving once again that when American companies are free to compete globally, they can win decisively. The tour has secured $600 billion in commitments from Saudi Arabia alone, with a flurry of landmark AI infrastructure agreements that cement U.S. technological primacy where it matters most – in the global marketplace.
The Trump administration's move to rescind Biden's misguided "AI diffusion rule" is the essential policy shift enabling these partnerships. The shortsighted regulation would have severely handicapped American companies while creating an opening for Chinese competitors to capture critical international markets. By prioritizing case-by-case agreements over rigid tiers of access, the new approach is far superior for both American companies and national security teams in the administration. White House AI adviser David Sacks captured this perfectly, saying "The country that builds its partner ecosystem the fastest is the one that can win this high-stakes competition."
🌽 Don’t forget that Breitbart News, ALFA, and CGCN are excited to host our next event with Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins on May 20. Technological advancements from autonomous systems and satellite imagery are making vast inroads into the constituencies served by USDA — whether it is helping America’s farmers increase crop yields and monitor and fight off invasive diseases, or providing new tools to fight wildfires. If you’d like to attend please RSVP here.
Thanks for reading and have a great day.
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