What began as a modest attempt to catch red-light runners has evolved into something far more sophisticated and unsettling. After years of expanding automated enforcement through speed and school-zone cameras, Miami-Dade County has taken a bold leap: testing a self-driving police car.
The Miami-Dade Sheriff’s Department is the first in the United States to pilot this new breed of law enforcement vehicle, a fully autonomous squad car loaded with high-tech surveillance gear and even a drone launch system.
This isn’t just a police cruiser with gadgets. It’s being described as a “smart, automated signals intelligence platform.” And yes, it’s wearing a Ford badge, but the brain behind it comes from PolicingLab, a private technology firm partnering with Perrone Robotics.
The “PUG”: Part Car, Part Watchtower
PolicingLab calls the vehicle the PUG (short for “Police Utility Guardian”). According to the company, it’s “a force multiplier combining advanced autonomy with AI-driven analytics, real-time crime data, and a suite of sensors including 360-degree cameras, thermal imaging, and license plate recognition.”
If that sounds like the description of a surveillance drone rather than a cruiser, you’re not wrong. The PUG is designed to extend deputy resources, improve response times, and enhance officer safety, all without, supposedly, costing Miami-Dade taxpayers a dime.
At least for now.
The Catch: A Pilot Project with Strings Attached
While Miami-Dade officials are promoting the initiative as cost-free, that’s only because it’s a pilot program funded by PolicingLab. The 12-month test phase will involve public demonstrations and community feedback sessions before any real enforcement begins.
Initially, the PUG will appear at public and media events as part of the Sheriff’s Department’s “community engagement” efforts. It’s a soft rollout designed to test public reaction, and perhaps ease concerns about surveillance overreach.
PolicingLab’s official statement says the pilot will measure “improved response times, enhanced deterrence, officer safety, and stronger public trust.” If results are positive, the company hopes to turn Miami-Dade into a national model.
The Real Cost: Data, Privacy, and Dependence
Here’s the thing, while the technology itself may not cost taxpayers today, it almost certainly will tomorrow. If these vehicles move from pilot to full deployment, they’ll likely come bundled with subscription and support costs. More importantly, the real value lies in the data collected and who controls it.
For PolicingLab, the experiment isn’t just about testing a robotic patrol car. It’s about gathering real-world data on patterns, behavior, and operational efficiency. That data could become a powerful (and profitable) commodity.
Critics warn this kind of tech blurs the line between public safety and corporate surveillance. Supporters argue it’s a natural evolution, a smarter, safer way to police without adding manpower.
A Glimpse of What’s Coming
For now, Miami-Dade residents can expect to see the self-driving squad car parked at events, cameras rolling, and drones ready to deploy. It’s a preview of what could become the future of policing in America, one where artificial intelligence, not human officers, might patrol the streets.
Whether that vision inspires confidence or concern will depend on what the next 12 months reveal. But one thing’s certain: the era of the autonomous cop car has officially begun.




