A New York City Council member is moving to ban the NYPD from ever strapping weapons onto its four-legged robotic dogs, citing safety risks and chilling civil-liberties precedents.
A New York City Council member introduced legislation this week that would permanently bar the NYPD from arming its four-legged robotic dogs, reigniting a debate that started the moment the units showed up in the field. The bill, dubbed the "ASIMOV Act," would lock current policy into law.
The author argues that even if the department has no current plan to weaponize the units, leaving the option open creates a legal gray area that nobody benefits from. Civil-liberties groups, police-reform advocates, and a handful of tech ethicists rallied behind the bill at its press introduction.
The NYPD did not formally oppose the proposal, with one senior official quoted as saying the department's working policy already prohibits armed deployment. Critics counter that policies change with administrations, and a statute is sturdier than an internal memo.
Notably, the bill carves out drones, which would remain governed by separate rules. That carve-out is the part civil-liberties watchers say will be the next fight.