Sentrycs expands new law enforcement deals, boosting drone defense
Eve Goode
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Sentrycs has announced that it has recently closed agreements with two new law enforcement organizations, including one in North America to continue its progress globally within the public safety market.
These new agreements will deliver core protocol manipulation sensor solutions across a wide variety of scenarios, from fixed sites to vehicle-mounted (mobile) operations.
Growing concerns over drone activity
The company notes that it has seen a noticeable spike in C-UAS interest heading into 2025, as in recent weeks, concerns have grown over unexplained drone sightings throughout several east coast states in the US.
These sightings have prompted calls from both officials and citizens for swift action to identify and mitigate these mysterious flights.
Unregulated or malicious drone activity poses significant risks to public safety and critical infrastructure, ranging from unauthorized surveillance and smuggling to potential terrorist threats where commercially available drones can quickly and inexpensively be weaponized.
Addressing these challenges requires sophisticated solutions capable of countering such threats effectively while ensuring no interference with other communication systems that rely on the same frequency bands as the drones themselves.
Sentrycs solutions to challenges
Sentrycs’ solution addresses the challenges head-on, offering reliable and field-proven capability designed to safeguard public safety with no collateral damage.
Leveraging proprietary technology, Sentrycs detects, identifies and tracks drones, significantly reducing the possibility of false detections, a challenge that is encountered with other technologies.
The platform also allows the operator to mitigate (or neutralize) the drone in seconds, directing it to a designated safe landing spot or returning the device to its original home location, avoiding the need for kinetic engagements that often cause collateral damage.
“Immediately and effectively”
Jason Moore, Chief Revenue Officer, Sentrycs commented: “Recent events here in the US, specifically those in New Jersey really highlight the need to monitor unregulated drone activity, as it poses significant risks to public safety and critical infrastructure.
“Every single day our technology is supporting missions to monitor or mitigate illegal drone activity. Our global footprint means we address a variety of threats from ISR (Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance) to enable human trafficking and drug smuggling, to even improvised explosive devices being delivered by the drones themselves.”
Moore concluded: “Addressing these challenges demands sophisticated solutions that counter such threats immediately and effectively without interfering with critical communication systems or causing collateral damage.”