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Wyoming sheriffs use thermal drone to find special-needs woman in deer-filled field in below FREEZING temperature after she wandered out of her home in the middle of the night

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A special-needs woman who was lost in the Wyoming wilderness was found by a drone with a thermal camera.

The Sublette County Sheriff's Office responded to a call around 11 pm on Thursday night about a special-needs women from Pinedale who had 'taken off in the night' and wandered, per the report. 

The precinct's Drone Team (SCSO) released footage of the rescue after police and the organization Tip Top Search and Rescue responded to the call. 

Once they arrived in the search area, they launched a drone equipped with a thermal camera to search for the missing woman. 

The woman was eventually spotted by the drone three miles from her home. In the footage, her body heat signature detected by the camera took the form of a human outline moving through the woods.

A special-needs woman wandered from her house well into the night Thursday

A special-needs woman wandered from her house well into the night Thursday

Law enforcement launched a thermal drone camera to help locate the woman

Law enforcement launched a thermal drone camera to help locate the woman

The woman was lost in a field riddled with deer

The woman was lost in a field riddled with deer

The drone was able to discern the woman's body heat signature from the deer's

The drone was able to discern the woman's body heat signature from the deer's

Thanks to the thermal detection technology of the camera, the woman was safely recovered and returned home after being checked by medical personnel.

Administrative Sergeant Travis Bingham, a pilot with SCSO, told Cowboy State Daily that the drone team made all the difference in finding the missing woman.

Had the team not had the thermal technology to locate the woman in time, Bingham said she could have died from hypothermia if she had not been found.

'She was a couple of miles ahead of responders from where she was last seen,' said Bingham.

'If they had kept following tracks trying to find her, they would've had a harder time and a slower response. 

'The drone cut down the time they would have spent in the elements by themselves.'

The issue at hand was trying to locate the woman in a field full of deer, who also gave off their own body heat.

Bingham said the camera that detected her body heat signature provided enough resolution to discern the woman's body from the deer nearby.

Had the team not found her in time, the woman could have succumbed to hypothermia

Had the team not found her in time, the woman could have succumbed to hypothermia

Her body heat signature detected by the camera took the form of a human outline moving through the woods.

Her body heat signature detected by the camera took the form of a human outline moving through the woods.

The woman was safely recovered and returned home

The woman was safely recovered and returned home

'We can stream what we're seeing as drone pilots to the phones of responding officers and back to dispatch,' he said.

'Then, we were using radio to relay changes, share what we're seeing and coordinate efforts with multiple pilots.'

As drone technology advances, they can utilize different attachments to assist in ways particular to a mission.

Sublette County was one of the first counties in Wyoming to add drone to their law enforcement squadron. Bingham said he believes the state of Wyoming, given how fast and rugged the terrain is, could find drones especially useful. 

'Being as remote as we are, getting a quicker response, and being able to cover a big area from above and see a bigger area than on foot was huge,' he said.

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