PREVENTING UNAUTHORIZED USE OF FIREARMS BY IMPLEMENTING USE CONTROL TECHNOLOGIES

Year
1995
Author(s)
Douglas R. Weiss - Sandia National Laboratories
Abstract
A goal among many law enforcement and security professionals, and the National Institute of Justice, is to decrease the risk that an officer or security guard may encounter. One risk that officers confront is unpredictable persons who sometimes try to gain control of the officer's firearm. The addition of userrecognizing- and-authorizing technologies to a firearm could eliminate the capability of an unauthorized user from firing an officer's firearm. Sandia National Laboratories has been active in the research and development of nuclear security systems that include access and use control technologies. Sandia is being sponsored by the National Institute of Justice to perform a research and development project to determine the feasibility of a user authorized firearm, or \"smart gun.\" The focus group for the research is law enforcement officers because of the number of firearm takeaways that have occurred in the past and the severe use requirements placed on their firearms. A comprehensive look at the problem of weapon takeaways in the United States was conducted using information available from the Federal Bureau of Investigation and other law enforcement sources. An investigation into the end user requirements for smart gun technologies has been completed. During the remainder of the project, the user requirements are being transformed into engineering requirements which will then be used to evaluate numerous technologies that could be used in a smart gun. Demonstration models will be made of the most promising technologies. Other potential applications are remote enabling and disabling of firearms, transportation of prisoners by corrections officers, military use in operations other than war, and use by private citizens.