Trending Topics

Watch: Calif. PD’s drone finds burglary suspect hiding in ceiling

When a K-9 search didn’t locate the man, Oceanside police officers deployed a drone and found him pretending to sleep above the ceiling

By Teri Figueroa
The San Diego Union-Tribune

OCEANSIDE, Calif. — Oceanside police had already spotted the burglary suspect inside the strip mall early Friday morning. They knew he was in the building. Question was, where?

The answer came after officers flew a drone between the ceiling tiles and the roof of the building, where they found their suspect feigning sleep before he partially fell through the tiles, Oceanside police said in a news release Friday.

Just after 3:15 a.m., police responded to a burglary alarm in a business on Mission Avenue just west of Canyon Avenue . When officers got there, they saw a suspect inside the premises, police said.

Several officers, including a K-9 unit from the Sheriff’s Office, searched inside but could not find him. They thought he might be in the ceiling crawlspace — so they put a drone above the ceiling tiles and found a man.

He fell through the ceiling tiles, but a wire caught him and saved him from crashing to the floor, Lt. Michael Provence said. Officers were able to help him down.

The 36-year-old was arrested and booked into Vista Detention Center on suspicion of burglary and what police said was an outstanding warrant.

Oceanside police have used drones since 2016, and while this was not the first time a suspect has been located in a ceiling, it is not common, Provence said.

The drone use Friday was not related to a still-in-the-works program to send a drone to a scene immediately after a call and possibly before officers arrive. The Oceanside City Council voted last month to approve the proposal as a 13-month pilot program.

Trending
A man stole the Aurora PD cruiser and led officers on a 30-minute pursuit before losing a tire; a police sergeant then crashed into the suspect
NYPD
“This is proof that people want to be cops again,” Commissioner Jessica Tisch said. “It shows that this profession is back in a big way.”
An 11% drop in homicides follows coordinated efforts like Operation Viper and the expansion of Tennessee Highway Patrol’s Bluff City Task Force
Department staffing has hovered at around 900 officers since 2023; in addition to the marketing investment, NOPD has raised salaries and enlistment bonuses to draw in new recruits

©2025 The San Diego Union-Tribune. Visit sandiegouniontribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.