Drones to fight school shooters? One US company says yes
Why this matters: local context for readers following news across Pakistan and the region.
A new idea for combatting America’s horrific problem of school shootings is to unleash an unarmed drone to confront the attacker, like a giant buzzing insect. It is the brainchild of a company called Campus Guardian Angel, which has pilot programmes using the technology in Georgia and Florida, with growing interest in Texas. These drones have not yet been battle-tested, however. The approach seems to reflect that part of America which says the way to address recurrent school shootings — part of the country’s broader gun violence epidemic — is not with stricter gun control laws but rather with weaponry, such as giving teachers guns. A pilot checks a drone during a demonstration of a school shooter take down, at the headquarters of the startup Campus Guardian Angel on May 8, 2026, in Austin, Texas. — AFP The company says the new approach would work like this: when a potential shooter enters a school, a teacher hits an alarm on their cell phone to alert the police and as officers rush to the scene, a drone is activated from a pre-established position inside the school as a first line of defense. These small, black, roughly square drones weighing about two pounds (one kilo) are piloted by humans in the Texas state capital Austin and can actually buzz around inside the school by navigating 3D maps that Campus Guardian Angel will have made beforehand. The drones do not shoot bullets or any other kind of projectile. Rather, they are designed to disable the attacker by flying right into him or her or spraying them with pepper gel. Khristof Oborski, Campus Guardian Angel’s director of tactical operations, said the firm’s CEO Bill King observed that small drones were highly effective in attacks on the battlefield in the war in Ukraine. “So he started thinking about how can you introduce this type of system to be able to combat a growing problem in the United States, with school shootings,” Oborski said. Oborski explained that what the drone actually does depends on what the s