Daniel Francis dropped out of high school, taught himself to code at a DC nonprofit, impersonated a laid-off Twitter employee to work for Elon Musk, and then built Abel Police — AI software that generates police reports from body cam footage, saving officers a third of their shift from paperwork. In this conversation, he shares the personal experience that led him to policing, why he believes solo founders have a massive authorship advantage, and his unfiltered take on co-founders, culture, and the emotional reality of building alone.
Topics covered:
- The domestic violence experience that led to Abel Police
- Officers spend one-third of their shift on reports — Abel's AI generates them from body cam footage
- Every 115 officers on the platform = one life saved per year
- Getting hired (and fired) by Elon Musk at Twitter
- From mercenary founding ($30K MRR fitness app) to missionary founding (life-or-death stakes)
- Catholic conversion and aligning company mission with faith
- Solo founder authorship: why one brain creates more coherent products (Apple vs. Google)
- The "Working at Abel" doc: floor on talent, ceiling on being an asshole
- Anti-culture culture: "Hurry up, here's the tickets, move"
- 39 police ride-alongs and embedding with Richmond PD
- Bear case and bull case for solo founding
- Why solo founders should give more equity to early hires (Carta data commentary)
- Contracting as a sneaky hiring pipeline
- The emotional reality: crying alone in the middle of the day — and never once considering giving up