Tulsa Deputies Used An Autel EVO II To Disarm A Suicidal Man

Tulsa Deputies Used An Autel EVO II To Disarm A Suicidal Man | ADrones | 1 Photo credit: News On 6

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No shots fired. No physical confrontation. A deputy spoke through a drone from 200 yards away and a man with a gun laid down and surrendered. This is what de-escalation looks like in 2026.

A Crisis Call on the West Tulsa Levee

On January 27, the Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office received a call about Joseph Giroux, as NEWSON6 reported. He had a gun, had reportedly tried to shoot himself, and was last seen near the levee in West Tulsa. He was also a suspect in a recent shooting. A convicted felon, not legally allowed to possess a firearm.

Tulsa Deputies Used An Autel EVO II To Disarm A Suicidal Man | ADrones | 2 Photo credit: News On 6

Deputies arrived and immediately deployed their drone.

First, they used it to find him. The levee area near West Tulsa is open terrain, but locating a single person quickly in a crisis situation still requires aerial eyes. The drone found Giroux and established visual contact before any deputy moved in on foot.

Tulsa Deputies Used An Autel EVO II To Disarm A Suicidal Man | ADrones | 3 Photo credit: News On 6

Then they used it to talk to him.

From more than 200 yards away, deputies transmitted commands through the drone’s onboard PA system: drop the gun, put your hands up. Giroux could hear the voice but deputies never closed the distance that makes a confrontation dangerous. He complied. He laid on the ground. Deputies approached safely and took him into custody.

Tulsa Deputies Used An Autel EVO II To Disarm A Suicidal Man | ADrones | 4 Photo credit: News On 6

No shots fired. No officer in immediate danger. No physical escalation of a mental health crisis that could have ended very differently.

Giroux later pleaded guilty to possession of a firearm as a felon. He is currently in prison.

The Drone That Made It Possible: Autel EVO II Dual 640T V3

Here is where this story takes an interesting turn.

Most people following the law enforcement drone space expect to see DJI or Skydio when a department deploys a public safety . The overwhelming majority of agencies in the U.S. run one of those two platforms.

Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office went a different direction. Their drone is the Autel EVO II Dual 640T V3. Seeing a department choose Autel over the two dominant players is uncommon enough to be worth noting.

Tulsa Deputies Used An Autel EVO II To Disarm A Suicidal Man | ADrones | 5 Photo credit: AUTEL

The EVO II Dual 640T V3 is a serious piece of public safety hardware. It carries two imaging systems on a single 3-axis stabilized : a 50 MP visible light camera with a large 0.8-inch RYYB sensor designed for low-light performance, and a 640×512 thermal imaging sensor with 16x digital zoom.

Tulsa Deputies Used An Autel EVO II To Disarm A Suicidal Man | ADrones | 6Photo credit: News On 6

The thermal camera operates at wavelengths between 8 and 14 micrometers, detects heat signatures down to negative 4 degrees Fahrenheit, and can classify a person at up to 1,778 feet, recognize them at 443 feet, and identify them at 223 feet.

Maximum flight time is 38 minutes. Maximum transmission range reaches 9.3 miles. The weighs about 2.6 lbs and can handle wind speeds up to 27 mph in cruise flight. It deploys in under 45 seconds from case to airborne. The Autel Smart Controller V3 paired with it runs a 7.9-inch screen with 2000 nit brightness, clearly readable under direct sunlight.

Two things make Autel a compelling choice for law enforcement specifically. First, no forced no-fly zones. The EVO II Dual 640T V3 does not have geofencing restrictions built in, which matters enormously when departments need to fly in areas that DJI’s geofencing might restrict.

Second, no forced firmware updates before flight. Operators control their own update schedule, which eliminates the risk of a critical deployment being delayed because the app needs an update.

The PA System and the Harder Conversation

The capability that resolved this incident was not the thermal camera. It was the speaker.

Capt. Michael Heisten with the Tulsa County Sheriff’s Office framed it directly. Without the drone, law enforcement officers are in a completely different position. When Giroux complied and lay down, deputies could approach safely, significantly reducing the risk of danger for everyone involved.

The drone’s PA system allowed deputies to maintain from 200 yards of standoff distance. No officer had to approach an armed, suicidal man to issue commands. No one had to make a split-second decision about lethal force at close range. The technology created space, and space created a peaceful outcome.

Heisten did acknowledge something departments rarely say out loud. A voice coming from a drone may affect people differently. Someone in severe mental health crisis hearing an amplified voice from an aircraft overhead is experiencing something that no training manual fully prepares first responders to predict. The department says it always takes that into consideration. That level of honesty in a public statement is worth acknowledging.

DroneXL’s Take

The Autel choice here is the detail that keeps pulling at me.

In a world where DJI dominates law enforcement drone procurement and Skydio has positioned itself as the domestic alternative, watching a department choose Autel tells you something. Either their procurement team did serious homework, they had specific operational requirements that Autel’s geofencing-free architecture satisfied, or both.

Autel is a solid platform. The EVO II Dual 640T V3 genuinely competes with the Matrice 4TD in the public safety space. But you rarely see it in a Sheriff’s Office deployment story.

I said it before and I will say it again here. The PA system does not get the attention it deserves in public safety drone coverage. Everybody talks about thermal cameras and AI tracking. The speaker is the capability that kept a man alive in West Tulsa in January.

Here is the honest part. The drone did not just protect the deputies. It protected Giroux too. The moment a physical confrontation begins between law enforcement and an armed, suicidal person, the probability of a tragic outcome for that individual climbs significantly.

Distance and communication are protective for everyone. This technology created both simultaneously.

38 minutes of flight time. A 9.3-mile transmission range. A 200-yard standoff. One man who went home to a prison cell instead of a body bag.

That is a good day for the drone.

Photo credit: News On 6, AUTEl.

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