An Oklahoma City police drone cut through the trees and the guesswork on Monday, guiding officers through thick woods to a stolen vehicle and two suspects now facing felony charges, according to the department. The fast find shows how the city’s growing web of cameras and drones is being used to recover stolen property while cutting down on risky, on-foot searches for officers.
Tech at work: Our Real Time Information Center (RTIC) drone guided officers through dense woods to a stolen vehicle. Two suspects were located and arrested on felony charges. Better tech = safer officers = a safer OKC. #26-21285 https://x.com/i/status/2048759446155780177
— Oklahoma City Police Department (@OKCPD) April 27, 2026
In a post on X by the Oklahoma City Police Department, officials said a drone from the Real Time Information Center, or RTIC, led officers to the stolen vehicle and two suspects. The incident is logged under case number #26-21285, and the department boiled the operation down to a simple tagline in the post: “Better tech = safer officers = a safer OKC.”
How the RTIC Helped Officers
The Real Time Information Center pulls together live camera feeds, license-plate readers, and drone video into one screen so analysts can feed officers real-time coordinates and overhead views before they move in. According to the department’s 2023 annual report, the RTIC went live in November 2023 and is staffed with analysts who can launch drones and plug in video from partner cameras.
Drones as First Responders in OKC
The Oklahoma City Police Department has rolled out a Drone-as-First-Responder setup that pushes aerial units quickly to both police and fire calls. Vendor materials report that about 40% of the city’s DFR deployments are tied to fire incidents and that drones have played a role in locating both victims and suspects. Those customer and case studies say the live drone feeds can cut down search times and limit how often officers have to work their way through hazardous terrain on foot.
Local Track Record and Oversight Questions…