How Founders Can Build for Law Enforcement and First Responders | The a16z Show
Public safety technology stands at an inflection point: drones, AI analytics, and real-time intelligence networks promise to fundamentally reshape how law enforcement operates. Yet founders entering this space face a paradoxical challenge — police famously «hate for things to change and for things to stay the same». This conversation explores how breakthrough technologies like autonomous drone response, body-cam burnout analytics, and international intelligence fusion are already being deployed in Arizona, and what it takes for founders to successfully partner with an industry notoriously resistant to disruption.
Kernaussagen
Autonomous drone networks will become inevitable for public safety because helicopters cannot maintain 24/7 coverage, enabling real-time pursuit of Amber Alert vehicles and active shooter response at scale.
Body-worn camera analytics now flag officer burnout and enable well-checks at 15 and 25-year marks, transforming mental health support and protecting both officers and the public.
The police skill set will fundamentally shift over the next 10 years from physical enforcement to investigative, nuanced work driven by AI, video analysis, and fraud detection.
Founders should not be intimidated by law enforcement resistance to change — if the technology represents an inevitability that benefits communities, adoption will follow.
Successful public safety founders spend extensive time with officers through ride-alongs or reserve roles to understand the lived experience and speak the language of the profession.
Kurzgesagt
The next decade will force every police officer to become more investigative and technologically fluent as AI, drones, and sensor networks replace traditional patrol tactics — creating a massive opportunity for mission-driven founders willing to spend time on ride-alongs and build for an industry that saves lives, not optimizes ad clicks.
The Drone Inevitability
Autonomous drones will replace helicopters for real-time pursuit and response.
Public safety is entering an era where drones become the only sustainable solution for continuous aerial coverage. Rahul explains that keeping five helicopters airborne 24/7 is simply not feasible, but autonomous drones integrated with gunshot detection and license plate readers can launch immediately when an Amber Alert vehicle is identified or a shooter flees a scene. The technology creates situational awareness that has already prevented tragedies — in one case, a 911 call about «a guy in the alleyway with a shotgun» turned out to be a janitor with a broom, completely deescalating what could have been a lethal force encounter.
This convergence of sensors represents a fundamental shift in capability. Flock Safety's network combines license plate readers, gunshot detection, and drone response into a coordinated system that can track suspects across highways with state highway patrol. The question is no longer whether drones will become ubiquitous in public safety, but how quickly departments can deploy them and integrate the data streams. As Rahul puts it, «it's kind of almost hard to see that it isn't inevitable».
Officer Wellness Through AI Analytics
Global Intelligence in a Border State
Arizona embeds international intelligence officers to combat transnational crime.
Colonel Glover is building an international intelligence presence within Arizona's Department of Public Safety, recognizing that «the world is getting a lot smaller» and crime no longer respects borders. The Arizona Counter-Terrorism Intelligence Center (ACTIC) now hosts intelligence officers from Mexico, the UAE, and Liberia, creating unclassified information-sharing channels that help identify trends before they materialize domestically. This fusion center approach mirrors the NYPD's successful counterterrorism model and responds to the reality that events in Austin demonstrate global incidents have local consequences.
The infrastructure supports major event security like FIFA and the Olympics while maintaining continuous threat assessment for Arizona as a border state. By combining human intelligence partnerships with AI-driven pattern recognition, the state can «stop a lot of the trends before they start». This proactive posture represents a significant evolution from reactive policing toward intelligence-led prevention.
Technology Adoption Arc
Body cams and Tasers followed predictable resistance-to-embrace cycles.
The Changing Police Skill Set
Officers will shift from physical enforcement to investigative technology work.
“Most of the cops out in the field are going to have to change the way their skill set is shaped because it's going to be a little bit more investigative. It's going to be a little bit more nuanced. It's not going to look the same anymore. It may not be about kicking in doors and other things. It's going to be looking at the technical aspects of this video you just received and looking at AI and certain things that are going to come up from a fraud standpoint as well.”
Founder Advice for Public Safety Tech
Spend time with officers and build for inevitabilities, not trends.
Recognize the Paradox Understand that cops «hate for things to change and for things to stay the same». This creates a narrow thread to navigate, but inevitable technologies will be adopted because they benefit communities and officers.
Don't Be Intimidated The perceived resistance is not insurmountable. If your technology solves a real problem and represents an inevitable shift, law enforcement leaders are actively seeking solutions.
Immerse Yourself Do ride-alongs, become a reserve officer, or spend extensive time with cops to understand their lived experience. You cannot build effectively without knowing what they face daily.
Connect with Leaders Engage directly with forward-thinking law enforcement leaders who are trying to get ahead of the technology curve and understand how their profession will transform over the next decade.
Impact at Scale
Flock Safety's network has rescued kidnapped children and prevented shootings.
Impact at Scale
Board members of companies like Flock Safety and Skydio receive constant notifications: «We found a kidnapped child. We used the technology in this way. We were able to deescalate a situation». These are not hypothetical use cases but documented outcomes where sensor networks and drones have saved lives, creating a mission-driven feedback loop that attracts founders who want to build something more meaningful than ad optimization algorithms.
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