we made it. can you tell, we re happy for the weekend. but thanks for being with us today and all week. we re so happy to have you here. it s good to be here. it will be a fun day. five things to know for this friday. former vice president mike pence testified in jack smith s january 6th investigation. we re told that pence testified before that federal grand jury for more than five hours. new overnight, two apache helicopter helicopters crashing in alaska during a training mission. three army pilots are dead. one was injured in the crash. also today, the fed s preferred measure of inflation set to be released. data could be critical in determining what the fed does next with rate hikes. also, tributes and reflections are pouring in for jerry springer. the legendary talk show host lost his battle to cancer at the age of 79. also this morning, roll tide! so happy to say that. so happy to watch this last night. the carolina panthers selected alabama quarterback
track. reporter: chief trooper says technology has only proven what he also suspected about his officers. what has this changed, anything? no. and i don t think that s bad thing. i want to catch something before it happens. i don t want to be reactionary. we want to be looking ahead to make sure that we stay ahead of the game and ahead of any issues and i don t think that is a bad thing. now the seattle police department was one of the first to adopt trulio. in recent months, they canceled their subscription with the ai platform because they had concerns over citizen privacy. obviously we asked trulio about this. they said all the data and video lives on the department s server. the department is the one in control. and trulio said there are ways to protect privacy, redacting certain information, making sure citizens feel like their footage is being be looked at safely and information is not going outside
pennsylvania has been using trulio for a year. he s also an adviser. these are the key words you put in? they are. stop resisting. custody. arrest. anything to do with pursuit. i m looking for high-risk things. reporter: trulio pin points the exact moments that need review. stop resisting. just relax. just relax. not a lot of resistance. it was giving me exactly what i was looking for. reporter: so for you this is a good interaction with one of your officers and a civilian? it is. reporter: the police department in california has been using trulio for a little over a year. it is seeming 36% drop in use of force by officers. the ai pointed out risky interactions with civilians giving officers the chance to review and change their behaviors. what would trulio s involvement fwhn a situation like tyree
intelligence tracking your day-to-day? i did have apprehensions. it is ai technology can sometimes have drawbacks. it s not perfect. but at the same time, i ve seen things play out enough where technology helped us. reporter: that is what trulio s co-founder and ceo is aiming for. we started trulio after george floyd was murdered in 2020. how do we prevent this from happening again? reporter: what percentage of body camera footage gets reviewed now? a fraction of 1%. reporter: and trulio could look at what percentage of body cam video? 100%. reporter: the ai was trained by humans to detect five million key tirmz. terms. profanity, noncompliance or explanations. the goal is detecting early problematic police behavior before it turns deadly. i get an e-mail alert every day at 6:00. reporter: dan s chief in