http://abcnews.go.com/US/story?id=1576247

Runaway Cars Tagged to Stop Chases
Los Angeles Police to Test GPS Darts
By CHARLOTTE SECTOR

Feb. 3, 2005 ‹ - A paintball-like technology could end car chases in Los
Angeles, and maybe across the country, if a system being tested in Southern
California delivers what the company that makes it promises.

The Los Angeles Police Department is testing a new secret weapon to halt
high-speed pursuits: smart darts.

The LAPD will use air-propelled miniature baseball size "tags" equipped with
a global positioning system. The officers fire the darts, which stick to a
fleeing motorist's car, and within minutes can find and track the suspect's
location.

"There is a social need for better managing of high-speed pursuits," said
Mandy McCall, chief operating officer at StarChase, the inventor of the
vehicle tagging and tracking Pursuit Management System.

Car chases, a staple on cable news channels, often end in deadly outcomes.
Last year alone, there were more than 600 pursuits in Los Angeles and more
than 100,000 nationwide.

McCall said that because of a business partner's death in a long police
pursuit, one of the co-founders of StarChase dedicated himself to finding a
way to put an end to the chases that endanger the police and bystanders
alike.

Super Glue-like Dart

"We believe this technology and the trials associated with it will
potentially give police officers yet another tool to minimize the damaging
risks associated with high-speed pursuits," Los Angeles Police Department
Chief William Bratton said in a prepared statement.

The LAPD will try out the technology for four to six months, which allows
StarChase to fine-tune its product before it starts selling the "smart
darts" to other law enforcement authorities, McCall said.

The vehicle-mounted compressed air launchers have been tested with the
golf-ball size GPS receivers that come laden with a "highly efficient" gluey
compound guaranteed to stick, McCall said. The tag adheres to the suspect
vehicle and then transmits location coordinates to a central location, where
it is superimposed over a computer map display.

Regardless of whether fleeing drivers realize they have been tagged, it's
unlikely that individuals could unglue the dart.

StarChase has not released prices for its tracking system, but McCall said
that the company would respect municipalities' tight budgets.

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