
AI, Drones and Black Hawks Reshape Public Security Across Latin America
São Paulo posts record-low homicides, Edomex deploys a military helicopter and Rio maps vehicle theft to criminal enclaves, as technology-driven policing expands.
In a single week in late June 2026, three of Latin America’s most populous jurisdictions unveiled technology-heavy security upgrades, each claiming measurable declines in violent or property crime. The state of São Paulo reported that homicides fell 11.3% in the first two months of the year to 369 cases, the lowest level since records began in 2001, while robberies dropped 21.4% and bank heists remained at zero for a second consecutive year. On the same day, the governor of the State of Mexico (Edomex) put a UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter into service and inaugurated a renovated C5 command centre equipped with artificial intelligence, robotic assistants and integrated drone feeds, citing a 60% reduction in average daily homicides since September 2024. In Rio de Janeiro, the Public Security Institute (ISP) released a study showing that 80% of vehicles stolen in 2025 were recovered in just five municipalities, with the largest share found inside or adjacent to areas controlled by organised criminal groups.
Each administration attributes the results to a distinct but overlapping set of tools. The São Paulo government points to its Muralha Paulista programme, a R$440 million network linking 125,000 cameras and sensors across 228 municipalities, which uses cloud computing and AI to identify crime patterns and direct patrols. It also highlights financial disruption: the Recupera-SP initiative has seized or frozen more than R$120 million in criminal assets, while drug interdictions since 2023 have inflicted an estimated R$3.2 billion in losses on trafficking organisations. Edomex officials stress the integration of state, municipal, airport and commercial surveillance feeds into a single C3TR platform, with automatic licence-plate reading and facial recognition, alongside the Black Hawk’s capacity for tactical insertions, aeromedical evacuation and firefighting. Rio’s ISP, by contrast, offers a diagnostic rather than a hardware showcase: its mapping reveals that half of all vehicle thefts in the capital occur within just 4.3% of the city’s territory, and that 92% of stolen cars are registered and recovered within three days, suggesting planned trajectories toward known reception points.
Viewed from European capitals, the Latin American push mirrors a broader reorientation toward tech-enabled, intelligence-led policing. In Sweden, the construction industry association Byggföretagen reported a 20% drop in break-in thefts at building sites during 2025, crediting government efforts against internationally mobile theft gangs. Yet it warned that 3,544 such thefts were still recorded, including roughly 12 per week in the southern police region alone, and called for a dedicated prosecutor, stronger Europol cooperation and more effective port surveillance to sustain the downward trend.
The investments carry institutional implications. São Paulo plans to hire 26,000 new military police by the end of 2026 and is expanding a specialised domestic-violence patrol with dedicated vehicles and electronic tagging of aggressors, following an agreement with the state’s Tribunal of Justice. Edomex has channelled 92.4 million pesos to 85 municipalities for local security and installed 35 “Territories of Peace” that bundle health, education and social services in high-risk zones. Rio’s ISP study is expected to guide the deployment of recovery teams and checkpoints, though the data also underscores the territorial entrenchment of criminal networks that technology alone may not dislodge. The Swedish government has yet to respond publicly to the industry’s demands, while the next phase of São Paulo’s sensor network expansion and Edomex’s aerial patrol schedule are due to be detailed in the coming weeks.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 3 languages
São Paulo celebrates historic crime lows driven by AI, real-time monitoring, and integrated police forces. The State of Mexico similarly upgrades its command center with artificial intelligence and a tactical helicopter to speed up emergency response. Technology is framed as the decisive tool for public safety triumphs.
Sweden's construction industry acknowledges a 20% drop in site thefts thanks to government action against international gangs, but warns that levels remain too high, with over 3,500 reported incidents last year. The sector appeals for stronger support to stop the thieves, while welcoming the initial progress.
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