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Watch The Moment A Robot Dog Leads Police Into A Las Vegas Bio Lab

When federal agents and Las Vegas police moved in on a quiet northeast valley home suspected of housing an illegal biological lab, the first “officer” inside wasn’t a SWAT cop or a K-9. It was a robot dog.

Footage released by Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department and aired by FOX5 Las Vegas lets viewers watch the operation unfold from the robot’s point of view as it pads into a dark, cluttered garage filled with lab equipment and unknown substances.

What You’re Watching In The Video

The footage opens with a line that immediately sets the stakes: a dog was the first to enter the home.

From there, the camera drops low to the ground, mimicking a real K-9’s perspective, as the robotic dog moves through hallways and into the garage while officers remain safely outside.

There are no people in frame at first, only shelves, refrigerators, and containers stacked in the shadows.

That distance is the point. The robot gives police a live look at what’s inside a potentially hazardous space without exposing officers or real dogs to unknown biological or chemical risks.

The Suspected Bio Lab On Sugar Springs Drive

According to police, the investigation centered on a home on Sugar Springs Drive near East Washington Avenue and North Hollywood Boulevard in northeast Las Vegas.

On the morning of January 31, 2026, LVMPD’s SWAT team served a search warrant at the residence with assistance from the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Inside the garage, investigators reported finding refrigerators and freezers containing vials of unknown liquids, larger containers with unidentified substances, and lab-style equipment.

Those initial discoveries were enough to trigger a major response.

What began as a warrant service quickly escalated into a multi-day HazMat operation involving Metro’s ARMOR all-hazard team, local fire departments, and federal partners.

By the time the scene was cleared in the early hours of February 2, officials said more than 1,000 pieces of potential evidence had been collected for FBI laboratory testing.

Authorities have repeatedly stressed there is no known ongoing threat to the public, though analysis of the materials is still underway.

How Technology Led The Search

Police say the Sugar Springs operation was a textbook example of what they call a “layered use of technology,” with machines taking the lead and people following only when it was safe.

Drones were launched early to provide aerial views as SWAT secured the property.

At the garage door, remote probes and pinhole cameras were used to test air quality and stream live video back to command centers.

Only after that did the robot dog go in, conducting the first interior sweep and transmitting live footage from inside the suspected lab.

Human teams entered later, once sensors and robotics suggested the space could be approached safely.

For viewers, the video turns abstract talk of high-tech policing into something tangible: machines first, humans second.

What Investigators Say Was Inside

Official updates add important context to what viewers see on screen.

Police and federal agents documented what they described as a makeshift laboratory setup, including refrigeration units, vials and gallon-size containers of liquids, and specialized lab equipment such as a centrifuge.

In total, more than a thousand items were logged and sent for testing.

Authorities also confirmed a link to a previous case in Reedley, California, where an illegal biolab was shut down in 2023.

The owner of the Las Vegas property is already in federal custody in connection with that earlier investigation.

A second suspect, 55-year-old property manager Ori Solomon, was arrested locally and faces charges related to the disposal and discharge of hazardous waste, according to Metro.

Meet The “Robo Dog” In The Footage

The four-legged machine seen in the video is part of a growing trend in American policing, most commonly associated with Boston Dynamics’ Spot robot.

Roughly the size of a medium-large dog, the robot weighs around 70 pounds and carries multiple cameras and sensors capable of operating in low light.

Boston Dynamics

Unlike older wheeled bomb robots, its four legs allow it to climb stairs, step over debris, and move through tight indoor spaces like the garage shown in the footage.

By late 2025, dozens of bomb squads and SWAT teams across the U.S. and Canada had adopted similar robots for hazardous searches, armed standoffs, and bomb calls.

Why Police Say They Use Robot Dogs

Law enforcement agencies consistently frame robot dogs as tools designed to save lives.

They have already been used nationwide to inspect chemical spills, enter barricaded homes, and even absorb gunfire during standoffs.

Their ability to operate indoors for extended periods makes them more practical than drones in many situations.

In Las Vegas, officials say sending machines into the Sugar Springs home allowed them to manage a potential biological hazard without risking officers, firefighters, or real police dogs.

The Uneasy Side Of The Video

The same footage that fascinates viewers also raises uncomfortable questions.

Civil liberties advocates and researchers have warned about mission creep, arguing that tools introduced for rare, high-risk incidents can gradually find their way into more routine policing.

Others point to the surveillance power of mobile robots packed with cameras and sensors, and the unsettling optics of a headless metal dog roaming residential neighborhoods.

That tension sits beneath the video once viewers hit play.

For some, it’s a reassuring glimpse of technology keeping officers safe.

For others, it feels like a preview of a more automated, less personal future for policing in Las Vegas.

Either way, the footage makes one thing clear: before anyone else stepped inside that suspected bio lab, a robot dog was already there, cameras rolling.

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