Brecourt was born out of operational experience and a hard truth: our society’s response to critical incidents is structurally broken.
Our team comes from military, aviation, and security operations backgrounds. We have spent our careers planning for worst case scenarios, building layered defenses, and responding under pressure when seconds matter. In those environments, one principle is absolute: you do not wait to understand what is happening. You move immediately, gather intelligence, and act with clarity.
Yet waiting too long for perfect information is exactly how civilian society responds to violent incidents today. And it’s not working.
A System Built for Delay
When serious incidents occur, response relies almost entirely on human arrival. Security teams and law enforcement are asked to move quickly into complex environments with limited information, unclear layouts, and no real-time visibility.
There’s often no immediate way to see inside a building, track a moving threat, or maintain situational awareness as conditions change. Responders are left with few options beyond waiting, staging, or entering with uncertainty.
This is not a failure of people. It’s a failure of infrastructure.
We’ve built a system that assumes time is available when it’s not, and that clarity will arrive after responders do. Violence unfolds in seconds. Information arrives minutes later.
The Response Gap
The national average response time to a serious incident (e.g. active shooter, bomb threat, armed robbery) is measured in minutes. The most critical moments happen long before that.
The gap between detection and informed response is where the most harm occurs. Yet society has largely accepted this gap as unavoidable, because there’s been no alternative.
Until now.
Learning From Fire
Society has already faced this problem.
Before modern fire infrastructure, buildings burned while firefighters were on the way. Firefighters were brave and skilled, but they arrived after damage had already begun. The breakthrough was not better firefighters. It was sprinklers.
Sprinklers don’t replace firefighters. They buy time. They slow the threat. They provide immediate response until professionals arrive. Today, they are mandatory life saving infrastructure.
Violent incidents deserve the same, if not better, approach.
Why Brecourt Solutions Exists
Brecourt exists to close the response gap.
We build indoor drone systems that deploy immediately when a critical incident occurs. They provide instant situational awareness, track threats, and give responders actionable intelligence before they make entry.
This is not about replacing people. It’s about equipping them.
Just as sprinklers changed how society responds to fires, we believe immediate autonomous response will redefine physical security. Speed, visibility, and information save lives.
Once you see the gap, you cannot unsee it.
That’s why we started Brecourt.

