Kentucky Man Arrested After Shooting Down Drone
McGruber writes: Hillview, Kentucky resident William H. Merideth describes his weekend: "Sunday afternoon, the kids – my girls – were out on the back deck, and the neighbors were out in their yard. And they come in and said, 'Dad, there's a drone out here, flying over everybody's yard.'" Merideth's neighbors saw it too. "It was just hovering above our house and it stayed for a few moments and then she finally waved and it took off," said neighbor Kim VanMeter. Merideth grabbed his shotgun and waited to see if the drone crossed over his property. When it did, he took aim and shot it out of the sky.
The owners showed up shortly, and the police right after. He was arrested and charged with first degree criminal mischief and first degree wanton endangerment before being released the next day. Merideth says he will pursue legal action against the drone's owner: "He didn't just fly over. If he had been moving and just kept moving, that would have been one thing -- but when he come directly over our heads, and just hovered there, I felt like I had the right. You know, when you're in your own property, within a six-foot privacy fence, you have the expectation of privacy. We don't know if he was looking at the girls. We don't know if he was looking for something to steal. To me, it was the same as trespassing."
The owners showed up shortly, and the police right after. He was arrested and charged with first degree criminal mischief and first degree wanton endangerment before being released the next day. Merideth says he will pursue legal action against the drone's owner: "He didn't just fly over. If he had been moving and just kept moving, that would have been one thing -- but when he come directly over our heads, and just hovered there, I felt like I had the right. You know, when you're in your own property, within a six-foot privacy fence, you have the expectation of privacy. We don't know if he was looking at the girls. We don't know if he was looking for something to steal. To me, it was the same as trespassing."
In other words, if a stranger wanders onto your property, you shoot them and ask questions later.
Merideth's neighbors saw it too. "It was just hovering above our house and it stayed for a few moments and then she finally waved and it took off," said neighbor Kim VanMeter. VanMeter has a 16-year-old daughter who lays out at their pool. She says a drone hovering with a camera is creepy and weird. "I just think you should have privacy in your own backyard," she said.
You could call the police and lodge a complaint like a civilized person instead grabbing your gun and shooting randomly at everything that you don't like.
Yeah, the drone pilot was probably being a douche. Does this give people free reign to go randomly shooting at things?
I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
Was he arrested, it appears simply for firing the gun. It isn't clear that the fact a drone was the target was a consideration.
We'll see what he is eventually convicted of.
In addition the shooter had no way to know with any reasonable degree of certainty that the 'drone' was unarmed. It could have been carrying an explosive device - and not just a gun as was recently seen, but actual c4 explosive.
Finally, even if it was only containing a camera, it was still illegal violation of the shooter's rights and the shooter had the right to destroy the object.
excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
There has to be a better way to take down drones. Firing a shotgun in your backyard into the air is going to be some kind of misdemeanor, even in Kentucky. Something like "discharge of a firearm inside city limits" or something.
Can someone please start 3D-printing some silent drone-killing weapons? It would be so much more satisfying than clay pigeons and my neighbors cats. (Note to neighbor: I'm kidding. That wasn't me.)
You are welcome on my lawn.
Ignorant Hick Discharges Firearm Destroying Property.
Thinks Shoot Justified, Fine Imminent.
Drones should simply be illegal. We don't need high definition cameras pointed at us in our private property. I urge you to write your representative to introduce legislation to BAN DRONES NOW.
Ok now it would be great if everybody focused their need for privacy against the US government and the NSA. Just like this guy did.
I completely agree with him. Drones should not be allowed in your personal property.
With existing and planned high resolution satellite and (plane-based) aerial imagery, there should be not expectation of privacy. This over-blown belief that UAVs are typically invading people's privacy in a way that is significantly more invasive to existing remote sensing platforms is something I would expect from Candidate Trump.
Never had a first degree wanton before.
I think he did the right thing by shooting it down. People shouldn't be allowed to just zip over a privacy fence with a drone and watch you.
Drones have cameras to facilitate flying. They fly low due both to their limitations and legal restrictions. Unlike helicopters (which don't tend to hover a few tens of feet over a house unless it's official business / emergency / news incident), these are often flown by unknown / unknowable private individuals. The owner of that property, in my opinion, was well within his rights specifically BECAUSE of what he mentioned: his young girls / family and an obvious private area (with any legal definition of an obvious expectation of privacy) of his home were being watched by some asshole with a hovering camera. I'm hardly a redneck and I'm certainly not a crazy gun freak but I would totally have done the same thing in this situation (ie, some asshole with a hovering camera obviously spying on people's private back yards). As soon as it crossed over his property and engaged in the same spying he observed over others' yards, he put a stop to it. I see absolutely no obligation to allow a (non-living) unmarked spying machine to buzz around my own private property and, since it's out of reach, a projectile weapon is about the only choice. Don't want your drone shot down? Don't spy on someone else's fucking private back yard.
Awesome!
Watch for the new video on Youporn
Harrison's Postulate - "For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism"
Whose drone wasn't so lucky,
For when over Merideth's did it fly,
A bullet shot it out of the sky ,
He recovered him broken and mucky.
see comment subject
This is a universally a very bad idea.
Discharging any weapon in a populated area except at a proper range or in defense of your life is generally illegal and a very bad idea.
I suspect he would be facing the same charges if he were merely shooting crows in his backyard.
When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
Noise
Officer Moretti: What did he do?
Arresting Officer: Busted into a car who's alarm was going off. Who's gonna take him down to central booking?
Officer Moretti: He busted into a car cuz the alarm was going off? Jesus Christ, what if everybody did that?
Arresting Officer: If everyone did it, people would turn off their damned alarms, now wouldn't they?
Yes, it may be illegal to shoot down drones. Yes, it is vigilantism. What if everybody did that? Then people would stop flying drones over other people's heads, wouldn't they?
Both parties committed a crime.
Sounds like the guy shooting the drone did something illegal (despite reasonable motivations), but the drone owner also did something I would consider criminal (illegal trespass, illegal surveillance).
How come both did not get arrested?
Nice shot man...
then the judge should order him to pay the drone owner the cost of the drone, then fine the drone owner 10x that amount for violating that man's privacy.
excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
Legally? I have no idea. Here I believe he could possibly be charged with destruction of property, unless zoning laws stated that he could not fire a shotgun. A shotgun fired upwards is very safe, the risk of anybody being hurt by a few birdshot coming down is minimal, so endangerment is only possibly from somebody being hit by the falling drone. And if that is a danger, what the heck is the drone doing flying over people anyway?
Morally? It seems to me that a majority of the drone pilots are douche bags, completely ignoring other peoples right to privacy and even safety. Just because it is possible to fly their drones anywhere does not mean it is a good idea. If somebody flies their drone into my property, collecting video footage, I believe I have the moral right to do something about it. It is no different from if they started racing around a RC car with a video camera in my backyard. Sure, I could call the police, but the police is unlikely to show up in time. And what is the police supposed to do about a drone hovering over my house? Waste time around until they find the pilot? This is a perfect example of when a well aimed shotgun shot will help improve how people behave. If they don't want their drones shot down, they can fly them over their own property.
As a gun-hating Canadian, I hope he wins for shooting down that drone. Not because I hate drones but because in this case it seems appropriate.
He should also sue the police department too, because it was trespassing and nobody was hurt, he didn't point his gun toward a person.
So a person doesn't have a reasonable expectation to not have their neighbors send surveillance equipment onto their property eh?
1. Simply buy one of the many freq jammers amped up enough for about 200 feet and watch the drones fall out of the sky onto your property. 2. Become a drone collector and charge a property access fee for owners to retrieve their property. 3. Profit!
A really bright flashlight would be useful in "shooing" drones away... If the pilot is flying over to snoop, he's not going want to stay if there is blinding light shinning into the camera.
"I felt like I had the right." .. The FAA's opinion differs.
“Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
I'm not sure that I'm convinced that one has a right to privacy in there backyard. If I was growing weed in my backyard they'd argue I didn't. I'm not sure that I'd agree with that, but... If you have a privacy fence around your yard then there may be some expectation of privacy afforded, but it's probably more or less of intrusion by government, not someone flying a drone near your back yard. Though because it entered his private space he should have a right to shoot it down. Now he probably shouldn't have a right to endanger the life of others even on his own property (short of posting said signs indicating that there is a danger prior to people walking onto it anyway). So there might be some legitimate ground to wanton disregard for the safety of others. However this sounds highly situational. If he shot in his backyard away from any other people or houses I'd disagree that it was with wanton disregard for the safety of others. I have an uncle who lives in Virginia with a sufficient amount of property to fire such weapons safely in the back of his house. It doesn't sound like that was the case here though. I'd probably have issued a ticket to the person flying the drone for trespass and collected eyewitness accounts of what happened from those around him. Then charged the person with the firearm as well. Unless there had been a clear defence situation where he was threatened (ie life or limb). I don't care where you are no law can be justified in stopping someone from taking defensive measures to protect there life. Though its doubtful that this was the case here.
If someone parked a car in your driveway and it had a dashboard camera, that doesn't give you the right to shoot at it with a shotgun. Plus there's the fact that shooting at a drone turns it from a not-very-dangerous object into a ballistic object (not to mention the projectile(s) you're shooting). A sane person would call the police rather than making a bad situation worse.
"I have never let my schooling interfere with my education." - Mark Twain
The drone just muddles the issue because nerds are passionate about them.
If a creep kept holding up a camera on a stick to videotape my daughters over my fence, I would put some bird shot in that camera as well.
while(1) attack(People.Sandy);
Hillview Police detective Charles McWhirter of says you can't fire your gun in the city.
He wasn't charged for shooting a drone, he was charged to discharging a gun within city limits. Reckless endangerment doesn't have anything to do with drones it means he was being a risk to public safety.
That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
We are accustomed to living in a 2D world (unless you live in a tall apartment in NY... and even then) but drones add a third dimension that we are not used to. I think the FAA has been far too lax in allowing drones to operate in unrestricted space and in not applying radio controlled airplane regulations to drones. Already we have drones crashing into buildings, falling on people, endangering commercial and emergency response airplanes etc, etc)
A good starting point would be to recognize the airspace above private property as part of the property, up to the level allowed to commercial aircraft. That would mean that drones could only fly above designated land surfaces.
"He took a duck in the face at 250 knots." -- William Gibson, Pattern Recognition
I had no idea you could have so much fun with a shotgun within city limits. WalMart, I'm seeing you at lunch.
Freezing up Paintball Balls No discharge of firearms, and Drone be gone! Or you can play super Lawn darts and just go get yourself a Spear Gun..They are in Kentucky! That should do the trick against a drone
~~"Of course, that's just my opinion. I could be wrong." ~~Dennis Miller
Fires a shoulder launch weapon at the Boeing 777 overflying his property citing privacy violations.
The public has in irrational fear of 'drones'.
If you want to fear a drone, fear one of these, not a hobby class R/C device that you can buy at Best Buy:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Atomics_MQ-1_Predator
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Atomics_MQ-9_Reaper
+ air duct waveguide + paraffin lens
see ya later, drone boy
I see a business opportunity in drone snagging net cannons just for this purpose.
So below are all the rules for flying an RC plane. Why don't we simply apply the rules to drones? As a matter of fact, you have to explain to me why the don't automatically apply anyway?
Fly below 400 feet and remain clear of surrounding obstacles
Keep the aircraft within visual line of sight at all times
Remain well clear of and do not interfere with manned aircraft operations
Don't fly within 5 miles of an airport unless you contact the airport and control tower before flying
Don't fly near people or stadiums
Don't fly an aircraft that weighs more than 55 lbs
Don't be careless or reckless with your unmanned aircraft â" you could be fined for endangering people or other aircraft
Come the revolution, the Bourgeois, Capitalistic, "A PARKING STICKER HOLDERS", will be first against the wall!
The value of your "two-thousand dollars in sophisticated hardware" (aka Peeping Tom Bot) is irrelevant to the value of his right to privacy. He defended that right, albeit somewhat over-zealously.
Condescending prick.
Air rights, unless previously given away, are up to 500' above your land or structure. It's as much trespass as the 5 year old who runs across your front lawn to get home for dinner after playing in the park.
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
And what can/will the police do?
Nothing.
So what other recourse is there?
I was at Baker beach on a Sunday when a family was flying a Quad Copter. A Dad and his kids having fun. Most people could see it was a family having a nice day out; but let me tell you - Some folks freaked the hell out and started accusing the Dad guy of filming them, etc. Some of it seemed like using the "drone" as an excuse to be belligerent in public.
A variation of skeet shooting. Seems like you gotta be pretty good to hit one of these things. Well, the guy is right. Thing like that buzzing around my head, I'll take a swat at it, too.The FAA has rules for flying machines, no reason not to apply them here.
I wonder, if drones, controlled by fast computers and all, could ever be able to detect and avoid rapidly approaching projectiles (bullet, buck shot).
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
Thanks for your stupid rant. Let me point out a couple things
1 "Then call the police, you know, those funny looking men in suits that drive around all day solving crimes like illegally firing a weapon in city limits?"
Cops will take a report and do nothing. What the hell do you expect them to do? In the 15 minutes it will take then to get there in ideal situations, the drone will be gone. Heck once I reported that I saw a guy with a gun yelling at another guy. Three police cars showed up 90 minutes later. Do you really think a fricking drone report is going to get an immediate response?
2) "Its the 21st century. every public pool you go to has video cameras" Here is where you really get stupid. This wasn't a public pool. It was this guy's back yard with a privacy fence. The reality is if I want to strut around nude on my property and take precautions that I cannot be seen by the neighbors I should be able to do so.
3) "If were to digress to a civilization of opening fire on whatever confuses and annoys us, " Now you go straw man. No one said we can shoot anything. Just what is put on my property to watch me without my consent. Not a human. Not something on public ground. Not something anywhere else.
I will be kind enough to not call you stupid. But your post clearly was stupid. if you are a smart person you will retract your statement.
It is illegal to discharge a firearm, longbow or crossbow:
Man is raising young girls and puts up clear signs to neighbors that he expects privacy in his backyard (i.e. privacy fence).
Underage daughter enjoys safety and privacy of backyard in bathing suit.
Creepy person launches an aerial camera platform and hovers over this backyard.
Yes, shoot the ever loving shit out of it. This is inappropriate behavior. Bad drone pilot!
As others have said, calling the police is not going to help. They can't exactly roll out a pair of RF direction-finding vans and triangulate the position of the drone operator. They might if you're lucky send some officers by in a few hours to take a complaint, and then most likely not do anything with it unless they get dozens of other complaints in the same area.
What we need is a net gun that will disable drones without endangering people.
Meredith was totally within his rights - his private property was being invaded. Fuck the owners of the drone - they are idiots, and the true criminals in this case. If someone flies a drone over my property, it's toast. And I'll fight any legal nonsense that ensues right on up to the Supreme Court (for what that's worth). This has to be gotten under control, now. People have NO RIGHT to fly their drones over private property. They could be recording video, they could even be toting firearms. Shoot first, ask questions later.
It obviously depends on local laws, however: generally speaking you have full rights and control over the airspace immediately above your property. This may be 10 feet, 20 feet, whatever you might reasonably use and/or access from the ground or your buildings. If this drone was ducking under people's patios, then it is a clear trespass into airspace that he and his neighbors have full rights to. Add to trespassing whatever charges apply to "peeping toms".
From it's actions, and from the prompt arrival of the owners, it is also entirely clear that the drone had a camera. The police failure to confiscate the drone for evidence is stupid, as that would be important proof in whatever charges are brought: either the shooting or the trespassing.
I'd have shot it too.
Enjoy life! This is not a dress rehearsal.
When seconds count, police are only minutes away.
https://www.eff.org/https-everywhere
Just curious...is a small radio-controlled toy considered an "aircraft" for the purposes of that law? I wouldn't think so, since as far as I know "aircraft" need to do things like file flight plans and such.
People shouldn't fly their drones around and trespass into other people's "airspace." Not only is it rude, I could see it also being considered illegal in short order if it isn't already. I agree with this guy.
http://gizmodo.com/is-it-ok-to-shoot-down-your-neighbors-drone-1718055028
(a) Whoever willfully—
(1) sets fire to, damages, destroys, disables, or wrecks any aircraft in the special aircraft jurisdiction of the United States or any civil aircraft used, operated, or employed in interstate, overseas, or foreign air commerce; ...shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than twenty years or both.
“This applies even if a drone is hovering over your backyard,” says Sachs. “According to the FAA, it controls all airspace from the blades of the grass up. However, even if you did own X feet above your property, you would not be permitted to shoot a drone that flies within that space because shooting any aircraft is a federal crime.”
And seconds count in the case because...why?
You don't have a camera on your phone? You don't think that in a neighborhood like this everybody *knows* who's drone it was or that, with all the sightings, the police couldn't find out?
Please, spare me the NRA talking points. They aren't salient.
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
Hovering over my property without my invite? Expect to be blown out of the sky.. if I determine I can get the shot without having the wreck come down on top of my house.
Alternatively, we can develop counter-drone drones, whose job would be to seek out unwanted drones and shoot them out of the sky.
Or how about a net-gun? Throw a net at the offending drone, capture it, and if it survives, sell the shit on ebay.
Brave new world, this one.
The "Civilized World" jumped the shark ca. 1973.
I have. Even when firing into the sky, the first rule is to ensure that there are no hazards down range regardless of your firing trajectory. If you trip or get startled there is a finite probability that you will fire downrange at an angle that will put anyone that direction at risk. Have you never take a gun safety course?
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
I doubt that owning property automatically implies ownership of the airspace above the property.
Property owners generally DO own the airspace below navigable airspace which in the US is generally considered to be around 500 feet as I understand it. Airspace above that limit is controlled by the FAA. Unfortunately the regulations regarding low flying drones are still being worked out so there is little clear precedent or statute here.
Those are public places with no reasonable expectation of privacy. The drone was above private property. I am no hikh, but I would take down a drone hovering over my property without question. Sue me for damages.
...because some creeper is going to use this to ogle his neighbor's underage daughter. A 21st-century peeping tom is still a peeping tom.
#hattip to the dad for protecting his daughter.
Many states require that a No Trespassing sign be posted for criminal trespass to occur. Kentucky does not require such a notice, but it DOES define trespassing in the first and third degress as being ulawfully *in a dwelling*. Second degree trespass is as close as he might get. I quoteth the law:
A person is guilty of criminal trespass in the second degree when he knowingly
enters or remains unlawfully in a building or upon premises as to which notice
against trespass is given by fencing or other enclosure.
(2) Criminal trespass in the second degree is a Class B misdemeanor.
Emphasis is mine. As to whether a telepresence (drone) constitutes a "person...upon the premises" will no doubt be the subject for his lawyer and the prosecution to discuss. At several hundred dollars an hour.
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
It is a currently unresolved legal issue I understand, but if the drone was over 80 feet up, it *may* not have been trespassing. Owning a drone myself, I am well aware of the temptation for misuse (you need to get on good terms with your neighbors, pro tip: boys love drone and often act as great ambassadors to the parents), still they are expensive and frankly likely the drone couldn't have been hovering for a really long time due to battery life. That said, I do look forward to better defined rules and regulations so everyone knows what to do and expect.
Its not an aircraft
It is an aircraft according to the FAA.
In my day this was an RC TOY.
Those are not mutually exclusive categories. It is legally and functionally both an RC toy and an aircraft.
Guns don't kill people; people kill people.
https://www.eff.org/https-everywhere
If someone puts stuff in your yard, it is yours to dispose of as you see fit. This covers trash like drink cups and what not. Anything mailed to you becomes yours, even if it was mailed by accident. I think this pattern implies that owner of the drone flew it to the shooters yard, and then the drone becomes the property of the shooter. It was a gift. I'm not sure about firing a weapon in city limits, but shooting your own stuff seems legal.
I fly a drone all over the place. I build "long-distance" autonomous missions (1.5 miles average) and send the thing off over the horizon to fly around. Occasionally, its path leads it over other peoples' property, but I try to ensure that property only includes things like farm fields, pastures, etc. If I do end up flying over someone's yard, I try to ensure it's high enough it can't see them, and also to make sure it's pointed in a direction that doesn't imply I'm coming toward something like their deck, front porch, or patio. And I sure as hell don't stop and hover over them. I live in an area where people are likely to pull out a gun and blow something out of the sky if they think it's "spying" on them.
I can see the shooter's point. Some drone pilots are assholes. I had a neighbor across the street until about 6 months ago. He was an old/bored/single/lonely old fart who seemed to have nothing to do but cause trouble (call the cops if an unfamiliar dog showed up in someone's yard). We weren't on speaking terms because as a rule, I generally don't make time for annoying pricks. He bought a DJI Phantom with a camera/gimbal and FPV, and would occasionally hover over my yard. I could see the camera moving to keep me, my wife, or my daughter in focus. He would follow us around the corner of the house if we moved locations within my yard. Without bothering to speak to him, I tried a few things. First, I launched my Iris (bigger, faster drone) and rushed him a few times. He kept it up, so I shot it with my garden hose at one point. The next step was to kill it with a wrist rocket, but he apparently sold it sometime shortly before he moved. I never got the chance.
If you shoot and injure (or kill) a 15 year old running across your lawn to get to his house, even if he stopped to look at your prized rose collection - or your daughter sunbathing - you will be charged and most likely convicted.
If you shoot and injure (or kill) a 15 year old who has walked in your back door in the middle of the night, but is otherwise unarmed and not a direct threat, you will be charged. Whether you go to jail or not will depend on a lot of factors, but you will probably also be a defendant in a civil suit which, if case law is any guide, you *will* lose.
If you shoot and injure (or kill) a 15 year old who is running at you with a knife and appears intent on causing you bodily harm, you will be charged. But you will also be allowed to argue that you were acting in self-defense. If the jury believes you, you will go free.
It's how the legal system in the US works. If you didn't learn this in high school, you simply didn't listen to what was taught to you in the most basic of civics classes.
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
Don't fly over people's property. Fuck!
Guns don't kill people; drones kill people.
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
First, you own the airspace up to a specific height, you will have to check your local laws on that.
Shooting brings up other issues. Was you in city limits?
Just shooting a drone that enters your airspace is really no different than shooting somebody's RC model car they drove into your driveway. There are a number of actions you can take, but shooting it usually is not one of them. Rural areas may be an exception.
The good news is, the guy that did it is unlikely to do it again, and you know who it was without any doubt, so you may be able to file some kind of charges against him.
The correct answer was
'What's a drone?'
or nothing at all. Never admit anything to the Po-lice.
Ok, so you can't fire a gun in the air, I am OK with that, it makes sense. Would it legally be permissible to fire an EMP pulse at the craft, disabling it, assuming this was done in a moment the drone did not poze a hazard by becoming a falling object? I'd be interested to see whether or not EMP-gun DIY guides will emerge eventually as a response to more drones popping up. If your drone is on my property, flying low, it's mine.
I don't recall what elevation your property is considered to be up to but I think it's like 200 feet or something. Or some level above your roof or...I forget. Either way, I support it shooting it down regardless.
1 - Those devices have [tacit] approval from the users. Fine print that shouldn't be valid, and sometimes isn't, but let's discuss that elsewhere. Your post suggests equivalence with an device that didn't have approval.
2 - The populace did not establish historical behavior. "They have never turned weapons on (hidden listening) devices." establishes little. The ignorance (and surveillance ubiquity) is a problem we should worry about soon, but your post suggests a claim of established behavior. This is slightly different from established "actions", which technically they did exhibit.
I have concern with rednecks shooting everything they don't understand. I have concern with trespassers invading my land. I don't really have much lean on today's event, where those contradict. I'm being admittedly pedantic about your post because im/precision will be at the root of all these headlines and lawyers.
I don't terribly care which way this ruling goes, so long as it avoids ambiguity and interpretables.
Growing up, I lived in the same house for 30 years. I never knew most of my neighbors, never mind the families one or two streets over.
The idea that people would know who owns a drone is so beyond moronic that it's a wonder you could even form the thought.
I wonder if a water hose would've shorted out the drone and brought it down. Not as dramatic though...
And would have taken the arrest in stride.
Yeah, I know, he's laying on the heavy appeal to emotion of "b-b-but my SIXTEEN YEAR OLD DAUGHTER!!!!", when really it should be the privacy of his entire family that's at stake here.
The law hasn't caught up with technology, and knowing a few things about how the government works, it's not going to for another few years.
But there are a few things about common decency that need to be acknowledged here.
One is that if a drone of unknown origin is hovering over your house, as is alleged here, it very likely has a camera and is watching something.
Another is while there's no absolute right to privacy that's can delineate whether or not privacy is being violated, I think we can agree that if a drone is flying over head and stops over your house, it should be perfectly fine to assume that if you don't know the origin, there's ill intent involved.
A third is if some person who is unknown to you is hanging around your house and looking in the windows, you do your damndest to make sure they don't do it anymore.
A fourth is coming to the reasonable assumption that the drone pilot knows what he/she is doing.
And finally, since the law isn't really clear on what drones can/will do, you can be pretty damned sure the police can do virtually nothing about said drone.
Therefore, I'd fucking shoot the thing to make sure that the owner of said drone understands that the protection of my home and property is serious fucking business to me.
Some people don't believe in fairies. I don't believe in The Patriarchy.
Mom still keeps you locked in the basement, huh?
Really - get out more. I know everyone on my street, at least by sight if not all by name. I know almost everyone on the next street down, at least for a block in each direction. Then again, I don't walk around with a shotgun on my shoulder so I guess I tend to be more approachable than the typical NRA fuckwad.
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
Lots of negative news on drone lately, our we hitting the peak of the hype curve?
As a drone researcher, I find that drones are the marijuana of technology:
On your property you should be able to shoot a surveillance drone that does not have a warrant that you have been notified of. Unless you are inside the limits of a municipality that decides that the discharge of a firearm is illegal inside city limits, which is pretty much all of them. Sounds like this guy was. If it was my daughter getting creeped I would be willing to eat the charges, but I would probably look into a more technical solution that would be legal.
Ideally you'd want to bring the drone down on your own property with plausible deniability that it was malfunction. You cannot legally search the contents of the drone's camera in many jurisdictions, and some of them do not even record locally. But when the controller shows up to claim it, you can ask for access to the video to verify that the drone is actually owned by that person and went down in your yard, being polite about it, just don't want to give it back to the wrong person you know. If they act shifty you know they were creeping, and if they give access and it is all staring at your swimsuited daughter you A.) call the police right then and there or B.) cause grave harm and then call the police.
The devices to bring down drones would probably be considered to violate the FCC, but it would be very hard to prove that you used one, and they will be popping up soon because of things like this. Running a microwave with the door off and the interlock disabled while pointing it at the drone would my first effort. But if that didn't work, some effort with an SDR would be needed and that would be late to need, so green laser pointer (probably even more illegal than a shotgun at this point), would be the next route. Shotguns are pretty safe when pointed up, they just don't have enough energy to do any damage on the way down if you use birdshot.
refactor the law, its bloated, confusing and unmaintainable.
What nobody discusses is this: Why was he arrested? The police should not arrest people randomly. This arrest was not necessary to achieve any justified goal. It only served as punishment, but punishments should be metered by courts, not by police. The case of Sandra Bland shows that false arrests is a much larger danger to the life and well being of the citizens that the danger of most of the pretextes. This man was not likely to keep shooting. Keeping him over night solved no problem whatsoever.
There is no substitute for common sense. Especially, no body of rules will do.
Birdshot doesn't hurt people on the way down. It wouldn't even mar paint on cars. It has a surface area to mass ratio that makes it have very poor velocity retention. That said, you are completely correct about the legal ramifications. In almost any municipality in the US discharging a firearm, airgun, or bow is quite illegal. Blow darts seem to be an often overlooked category but they would probably call it an air rifle. If you are outside an incorporated municipality, such as when the burbs spread faster than they are annexed, you can shoot all you want in most counties, as long as the projectile does not cross a roadway, so shoot almost straight up and you would be fine.
refactor the law, its bloated, confusing and unmaintainable.
I'd be curious if the 'mischief' was related to the destruction of the drone, or the willful firing of a firearm in a non-life threatening situation that could potentially endanger those nearby, or cause dispatch of emergency services due to 'shots fired'. Had he thrown a baseball and knocked it out of the air would this have resulted in an arrest?
guns don't kill people, they kill drones.
This reminds me of the last drone I read about being taken out by gunfire. It was some PETA people using a quadracoptor to harass some hunters - it was really an obscenely loud whiny thing, and their goal was to scare game and such.
They complained to the cops that had shown up that their drone had been shot. The cops looked at them like 'so what'?
The PETA types tried 'but that was dangerous!' Keep in mind that, unlike this case, said hunters were in an area where firearm use was legal.
I don't read AC A human right
The article says they have laws against firing guns in the city so there is a point behind arresting him for that.
The drone owner was definitely acting improperly but I also don't think fire first and ask questions later is the correct approach. I'd try to get the drones attention with a gun to let it know this is unacceptable, then if it sticks around it is time for some drone skeet shooting.
I think he should get whatever the typical penalty firing a gun in the city is, otherwise just a slap on the wrist. The drone owners should have gotten hit harder by the police though.
The govt has a precedent to uphold here. You allow a man to shoot down a citizen's drone, and you're opening a whole can of worms.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hxszN_1k6fQ
Basically his action meant "Get off my lawn" and "This isn't the year of drone on your backyard"
- Burma Shave.
Firing a weapon in a populated area except in defense of life and limb is a colossally stupid idea and patently against the law, just because your privacy is being violated is no excuse.
Today I learned that Hillview, Kentucky is a populated area.
With a net or something.
If the drone pilots show up looking for their precious treasure, say they can have it back after some things have happened, They must bring you to their home so that you can gawk to your hearts desire at their family for a day. install a spy cam to check out their mom or wife or sister, etc. The creepier the better. They must [ay a 10% finders fee to get it back, and also sign a contract agreeing to pay some large sum if they ever are caught flying over your property again.
-- Another senseless waste of fine bytes.
He'll plead to negligent discharge of a firearm. Shooting into the air in a suburban neighborhood is dangerous. When you miss, the bullet comes back down somewhere, possibly at speed.
Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
In my unincorporated county, it is legal to discharge firearms if done in a safe manner.
As mentioned, shotgun pellets would not be dangerous upon return (terminal velocity situation).
If someone were hovering over my place with one of these things, I'd give it a dose of bird shot.
It's just plain rude. Additionally, this guy's neighbors were assholes, coming over in number and threatening him.
It's also legal to carry without a concealed carry permit on private property where I live (not that I go around with a firearm on me).
In a city, this is a whole 'nuther situation.
I am a quadrocopter builder and pilot myself. I would agree that it is wrong to fly a quad above people, houses or cars.
An experienced pilot usually can plan a flight in a safe way.
One of the most efficient security measures is flying early in the morning, just when sun begins to rise (at about 6 o'clock). There are less people around, and rising sun makes aerial images better.
This company has developed a replacement upper receiver for any milspec AR-15 that can fire things like soda cans, t-shirts, dog toys, etc using milspec blank rounds. They are designing a net that can be fired from unit which seems like it will be perfectly suited for this type of thing.
http://www.xproducts.com/ar-15-soda-can-launcher-accessories-launcher
What is this american obsession with property.
Privacy is someting you can expect, regardless of property. It in fact has nothing to do with property.
Privacy is something you can excpect even in a public place.
Even at the beach. Someone talking a picture of you without permission can not publish that.
Whether you own thy beach or not.
-- Another senseless waste of fine bytes.
Where's Zimmerman when you need him.
Give the drone owner's name out. Let everyone know who is peeping on a 16 year old.
is that not some sort of sexual harassment?
The fuck off my lawn.
Captcha (Pumped)
You mean other than shooting a shotgun in a populated area without concern for others or for their property?
Oh, just for grins, how about following the fucking drone back to its controller. The control signal must be line-of-sight and it has a fairly limited range, that wouldn't be too hard.
every problem or confrontation, minor or major, ends with a firearm being pulled.
Open season.
If this guy needs financial help to defend his actions, I hope there is a Go-Fund-Me account started. I would have done the same thing to protect my privacy as well as my daughters!!!
Doesn't the law make any allowance for "community standards" anymore?
I mean, what would Sheriff Andy Taylor do? (OK, OK, a different state, but you get the idea.) Sure, Barney would reach for the cuffs, but Andy would try to mediate this dispute, no?
I love how people quickly lump everyone together as "they". This pilot sounds like an idiot (I have no proof either way). This pilot is one out of hundreds of thousands, almost all of which manage to stay out of the news. This article attracts a lot of attention because "drones" tend to push people's paranoid buttons (occasionally, rightly so). You do not own the airspace over your house, though an intelligent pilot would keep a respectful distance. I belong to a multi-rotor club and guidelines are often discussed for safety and co-existing in society in addition to actual regulations. None of us want to see safe and courteous use of our copters curtailed by one or two idiots. Two facts will remain: drones are here to stay, and there will always be an idiot somewhere. (Sometimes people with guns can be idiots too.)
+1 awesome.
for me the lesson here is that everybody is upset that he shot the drone with a gun. nobody's upset that he destroyed the drone. lesson learned, next time use a football or a golf club. those things are horribly unstable, and you tap one blade then boom.
I live in a high travel tourist area, one of the biggest vacation spots on the east coast, which sometimes sucks in it self...alot.
This year, on top of the usual issues of traffic and most everyone being on vacation in the area where you are trying to work and live we have had to deal with drones...lots and lots of drones. Call it critical mass, a tipping point or whatever you want but the Drones have most defiantly arrived in force this summer.
Forth of july, 100 meters above and behind the Town fireworks an annoying blinking drone sat the whole time, when it began to run out of batteries it was swapped with another. The group managed to keep a drone in the sky the whole time (well over 30 min) and whether conscious or not it felt like the drones were trolling the fireworks lol!
Go for a walk by the ocean last week, every 50ft a drone operator sat...so much for a nice walk instead I was ducking drones and then chuckling as one became unresponsive seemed to keep going out to sea, anyway you get the picture, they are everywhere.
William H. Merideth was protecting his private property and his right to privacy in his own home.
If your a jackass and flying a drone over peoples backyards you deserve to get it blow out of the sky AND suffer criminal or civil trespassing charges.
Drones and The South do not mix.
Some special shotgun drone loads would be cool. They do have shotgun nets, but the range is way too short. Maybe something that unraveled streamers, like streamer recovery that Estes rockets use?
Of course everyone in the neighbourhood knows whose drone it is. Just like they knew the guy had a shotgun and shorter trigger. This was all a setup by the antigun prodrone lobby to make a
Meh. Point of seconds to minutes is police would prioritise, so if seconds are minutes then minutes are hours? Can you now prove conclusively that that was the drone that was in the area "Zoom, Enhance. Uncrop. Aha! The serial number!" ? Is "oh yeah, he owns a drone" enough to convict? What if more than one person has a drone in that city! Or maybe was a passerby, a serial droner. Any proof after the drone is all nicely stashed away? "Going by engine temp, this drone was used in the last 10 hours Jethro. I'm afraid it appears our perp is a peep".
More than enough real crimes out there, this seems to have pretty much self-resolved. Police involvement seems silly, and showing up to reclaim the drone smacks of "Officer! This is the thief that stole my cocaine".
Naturally the guy overreacted though, it's not like anyone has ever been hurt or killed by a drone. We should all let them fly overhead without concern.
But, stranger danger. Stranger Danger!!!!!
How big of a net you could stuff in a shotgun shell, I smell money here ....
I demonstrated that you were wrong attempting to equate to unequal objects, so you move the goal post. Not surprising, this tactic is common with irrational and/or unreasonable people.
Your move attempts to incorrectly paint a picture of a person firing a weapon in a crowded area. It is not against the law to defend your property, in fact this is a fundamental right given to us by the Constitution. Read it, understand it, and enjoy it. If you dislike the Constitution you are free to leave the country and find somewhere else to live. Start your own Utopia, but don't try to convert everyone else to a system which is impossible to achieve.
-The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.
I know this raises questions about privacy and gun laws and appropriate use of guns and on and on, but I want to see a photo of the drone that he shot!
Doesn't matter what some BS law says regarding drones over private property, you are well within your rights to shoot the drone out of the sky if it is invading your privacy and on your property. In this instance, the man acted appropriately and used birdshot to knock it out of the sky. This man is being illegally charged for a nonexistent crime, I smell a major lawsuit in the making against the asshats who ILLEGALLY CHARGED HIM.
Just have a high power water gun handy; if you start soaking the drone I bet the operator will clear out. If not then maybe you can knock it down :)
The homeowner would be able to call the authorities and they would prosecute the drone operator. As a kiwi, I'm very happy to have the Rule Of Law protecting my privacy. Given that the US isn't likely to get such a statute in the near future, is there are legal way to disable a drone that is spying on you ?
It's good luck to be superstitious
i would have shot down the drone if my daughters were outside sun bathing in the pool. I love technology and how far it has come, but this is UNACCEPTABLE. i WILL NOT LET SOME CREEP WATCH ME OR MY FAMILY WITH THE USE OF A DRONE.
There needs to be a public petition to ban drones above private property, sorry but it is just not right for anybody with a drone to spy on me.
Maybe a mechanism to not let the drone travel more than 20 feet in any horizontal direction before it reaches a vertical altitude of at least 500 feet. That way I dont have to worry about protecting my family and if somebody does decide to fly a drone over my house, he will be 20 feet from it so I will be able to call the police on him/her.
Freedom loving gun owners battle Freedom loving drone owners. Both sometimes known to go a little off the deep end with their hobby.
Now: Fight!
Drones could be used by criminals to see if anyone is home then rob you. Perverts can use them to try and catch someone naked. They should not be allowed to come into a person's yard.
Besides, I've never come across a drone recipe that was at all edible.
He could have built his own Net Gun, here is the site with all the instructions. "http://www.instructables.com/id/Build-A-Net-Gun/". If I owned a house, and someone flew a drone over my property, I would be upset also. Hamsterz1:)
What a bunch of paranoid, blow it outta the sky losers. Damned r-tards.
There has to be a better way to take down drones.
Can someone please start 3D-printing some silent drone-killing weapons?
No need, just buy a Paint Ball Gun. Not even classified as a firearm but will do the job nicely.
Just because you THINK that justifies your anger doesn't mean it IS a pervert.
After all, that man waiting outside the school is probably a pervert.
Unless it's you and you're waiting for your child to leave because you're taking her to the dentists'.
So, lets say you find out it wasn't a pervert. Say it was your grandma, playing around. Now after you shot her UAV down, because she's a pervert, do you tell her she's a pervert when she comes round to ask why you shot her UAV down? Or do you somehow know which UAV is from your grannie, which ones from non perverts and only shoot ones that set off your "pervert detector"?
Lets say the police are using the UAV to track a murderer and they happen to be hiding oblivious near your garden. Do you shoot down the UAV because the police are perverts? And when you find out that the murderer got away, the police will be fine and you'll accept that you must be in cahoots with the murderer so you will go to jail for accessory after the fact?
Punt guns are shotguns that were larger than double-ought and could load solid slugs.
But since you think that shotguns only load birdshot, please STOP PRETENDING you know what the hell a shotgun is.
In the redneck form of government, you take the law into your own hands for even the most petty of offenses. There's no need for lawyers, cops, judges or any of the like. See two men holding hands? Beat the fuck out of them. That will let them know that gay marriage isn't allowed - if you see them together again, you kill one of them and the marriage problem is solved. Don't like black people? Burn a cross on their front lawn as a warning sign if you're one of those "soft" rednecks, but the proper punishment for having dark skin is hanging. Neighbors dog is barking in the middle of the night. A couple of rounds from your .30-06 will shut that mutherfucker up and let you get a good night's sleep.
It's so much easier and safer when we all have guns and are willing to use them to solve any dispute. Just ask the NRA - they'll concur.
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
Go for the camera, not the drone.
"I dun shart at thet drone thingy cuz I was scurd it wood take pitchers of mah meth lab!"
I wonder if it would be possible to fabricate a compressed net that could be shot from a bow for 25-30 feet that would open up and foul the propellers, which would ground the drone with minimal destruction.
I agree with the property owners aggravation, but the use of a gunshot to deal with it is excessive.
Using google shows I am not alone.
https://www.google.ca/search?q...
And any idiot with money can buy one.
Honestly, if your drone is in my yard I am defiantly going to make a pinata of it at the first opportunity. You will not be getting it back.
I would have and will do the same thing. A flyby at altitude is one thing. hovering and hanging out is another. He is certainly justified in shooting that sucker down if you ask me, leagly may be another thing. However the drone owner was trespassing remotely.
The quest of discharging a firearm in a neighborhood might be another. But there is solution for that, An airgun is NOT a fire arm, and would have been a wiser choice. With the better legal results.
http://www.wdrb.com/story/2967...
At that height, I doubt the drone owner would be able to have seen the shooter's lovely teenage daughter. It was certainly interesting to see how the tracker folloed the drone as it lost altitude and crashed.
So I suspect in the end, I think the Shooter was just trying to prove his point and have something to talk about at the local bar. He'll be a legend to the terminally fearful, protecting hiz dawder from drowne flyin' preverts. At around 200 feet. I have a drone, and they just aren't designed to spy on people like that.
It's a good thing he didn't shoot down that pistol packin' drone we heard about the other day - that would have violated someone's second amendment rights, and started a 21st century Hatfield/McCoy war.
The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
Prosecutors are way out line with a wanton endangerment charge. I would be suing the city on that alone. There is no longer any legal bounds much less bounds of reason expected or enforced any more.
The same goes for your drone.
Pull!
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
You are not allowed to put video cameras on someone else's property. Not even your OWN if they are hidden in a bathroom or something. I think he had the right. Wish we had fully developed lasers...
I don't think many adults don't know of someone who lost an eye from a bb gun. In the old days 300 fps was fast. Double ought buck will fall about 250 feet per second. Your mother was right, you could put your eye out with that. Maybe Chicken Little was right? I don't doubt the evil intentions of the drone owner photographing scantily clad maturing children, but as a gun lover life member of the NRA, That was a really stupid thing to do, Mr Merideth, Ha ha if he called 911 and told the dispatcher (usually a young mother) The neighbor is secretly taking pictures of my young girls in my private back yard in their bikinis. It might have brought the drone down faster than the gun(-:
Your move, Florida...
Shoulda used a potato gun. Legal, but much more likely to hurt someone. :-)
No criminal damage, no theft, nothing related to the confrontation with the drone owner.
Discharging a firearm within the city limits (not at a range) is a stupid thing to do regardless of the circumstances. What goes up, must come down - and stray bullets are a major source of death and injury in the USA thanks to feckless gun owners who take no account of trajectories before pulling the trigger.
I know shotguns use pellets but being rained on with birdshot still isn't nice and it can damage paintwork on cars, etc. Buckshot still has enough kinetic energy on the way down to cause substantial injuries at a couple of hundred feet
Had he used a butterfly net, I think the police would have left him alone.
Who needs lead when your foe is electronic?
A six foot fence in a neighbor's yard is nothing compared to a second story window. What would you do then?
Yes, a drone *IS* different, but a gun was not warranted. What was warranted was a camera, tracking the drone back to its owner, and a call to the cops.
Perhaps topped off with a YouTube posting of the whole affair.
Altitude dependent. Bigot.
APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
From what I understand, this occurred in a populated area. There should be two separate appearances before the judge over this. For the homeowner: Illegal discharge of a firearm... period. For the drone operator: Invasion of privacy and creating a public nuisance. I'm no lawyer, but this seems fairly common sense. I tend to side with the homeowner. Here in Los Angeles irresponsible drone operators have been responsible for all kinds of (probably unintended) actions, from grounding aircraft to causing bodily injury of innocent bystanders. One cannot just go around flying at low altitude over a populated area without putting others in danger. The laws better start catching up with technology, but in the meantime people need to exercise better judgement (I know the latter is unlikely).
40mm? I didn't know Glock made artillery pieces.
It is a pretty sure thing that the government is spying on us, too. Right? Remember the Snowden revelations? Don't you think that certain government agencies might be looking into our private lives from above as well? (Even though they are supposed to not do that?) Should we be able to shoot down any device invading our privacy? What is the height limit on spy devices that we are allowed to protect ourselves from? Seems to me that citizens of the American Constitution have the right to protect our own privacy. The Constitution gives us the right, and needs to be updated to clarify this for modern times (and thus consider modern technologies). How about this: If you come into my house and threaten me, I can shoot you to protect (me). If your drone flies into my space and appears to threaten me and my rights, I should be able to shoot it.
Self-importance and self-indulgence is the root of ALL evil.
Depending on the range, pressure washers and garden hoses work quite well. Paintball guns, not so much.
I am very small, utmostly microscopic.