Brinc, a maker of drones for public-safety and emergency response, raised $125 million led by Motorola Solutions and Index Ventures, with Figma co-founder Dylan Field also participating, according to Crunchbase News' weekly funding roundup published July 17. The Seattle-based company is part of the fast-growing drone-first-responder category, where police and fire departments dispatch a drone to reach an emergency scene ahead of officers or paramedics on the ground.
Motorola Solutions' direct participation extends a strategy the company has run for years: building out the broader public-safety technology stack around its core land-mobile-radio and 911-dispatch business through acquisitions and investments in video security and, now, drone hardware. For Motorola, Brinc becomes another node in an increasingly integrated public-safety software and hardware ecosystem that competes with Axon's own expanding drone and camera business.
Drone-first-responder programs have scaled quickly across US police departments over the past two years, giving Brinc a real deployed customer base rather than a purely speculative addressable market -- a meaningfully different risk profile than most venture-backed hardware categories. Dylan Field's participation is notable for a different reason: it's part of a broader pattern of prominent consumer-tech founders writing personal checks into defense- and public-safety-adjacent hardware companies through 2026, a category that's drawn increasing non-traditional investor interest as the AI and robotics themes converge with national-security spending.
The bear case: Brinc competes directly with Axon, which has far greater law-enforcement distribution and an existing body-camera and Taser relationship with most large US police departments, and public-sector sales cycles remain slow and politically sensitive regardless of product quality. What to watch next: how many additional police departments adopt Brinc's drone-first-responder program in the next two quarters, and whether Motorola deepens its involvement toward an eventual acquisition.