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65-Year-Old Woman Shoots Down Drone Over Her Virginia Property With One Shot (arstechnica.com)

An anonymous reader writes from a report via Ars Technica: Jennifer Youngman, a 65-year-old woman living in rural northern Virginia shot down a drone flying over her property with a single shotgun blast. Ars Technica reports: "Youngman told Ars that she had just returned from church one Sunday morning and was cleaning her two shotguns -- .410 and a .20 gauge -- on her porch. She had a clear view of the Blue Ridge Mountains and neighbor Robert Duvall's property (yes, the same Robert Duvall from The Godfather). Youngman had seen two men set up a card table on what she described as a 'turnaround place' on a country road adjacent to her house. 'I go on minding my business, working on my .410 shotgun and the next thing I know I hear bzzzzz,' she said. 'This thing is going down through the field, and they're buzzing like you would scaring the cows.' Youngman explained that she grew up hunting and fishing in Virginia, and she was well-practiced at skeet and deer shooting. 'This drone disappeared over the trees and I was cleaning away, there must have been a five- or six-minute lapse, and I heard the bzzzzz,' she said, noting that she specifically used 7.5 birdshot. 'I loaded my shotgun and took the safety off, and this thing came flying over my trees. I don't know if they lost command or if they didn't have good command, but the wind had picked up. It came over my airspace, 25 or 30 feet above my trees, and hovered for a second. I blasted it to smithereens.'" Ars goes on to explain that aerial trespassing isn't currently recognized under American law. "The Supreme Court ruled in a case known as United States v. Causby that a farmer in North Carolina could assert property rights up to 83 feet in the air. There is a case still pending on whether or not Kentucky drone pilot, David Boggs, was trespassing when he flew his drone over somebody else's property. "Broggs asked the court to rule that there was no trespassing and that he is therefor entitled to damages of $1,500 for the destroyed drone."

32 of 644 comments (clear)

  1. Next Phase by SuperKendall · · Score: 5, Funny

    If it's not legal to shoot down drones flying over your property, then people will take the next logical step of simply shooting the drone operators so there is no-one to complain... which is what I expected to happen when a bunch of morons started yelling at an armed 83 year old woman who had already demonstrated herself to be a crack shot at long distance.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Next Phase by Reaperducer · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Hard for me to be critical of this woman. I would do the same thing, if I owned both a house and a gun.

      Someone once predicted that drone deliveries are going to devolve into "skeet shooting with prizes."

      The neighbor a couple of doors down has a drone that he likes to fly up and down the street looking in the second-story windows of the houses. I doubt he's seen anything interesting because those things are LOUD! Hard to sneak up on someone with a flying leaf blower.

      --
      -- I'm old enough to have lived through six different meanings of the word "hacker."
    2. Re:Next Phase by haruchai · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Amen! A shotgun can hold more than one shell. Use the first to shoot down the drone and the others (preferably slugs) to shoot the operator.

      I carry a .45 on my job, mainly for protection from vicious dogs. The pistol holds 10 rounds in the magzine + 1 in the chamber. The first round is for the dog, the other 10 are for the dog's owner.
      Haven't had to shoot one yet, but any day now . . . .

      Sounds like there's a vicious dog with an itchy trigger finger

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    3. Re:Next Phase by ProzacPatient · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Obligatory disclaimer: I am not a lawyer and the following is merely opinion that does not constitute legal advice.

      From what I can gather, and anyone feel free to correct me if I'm wrong, Virginia's castle doctrine is kind of convoluted and doesn't allow you to use lethal force against trespassers and you have a duty to retreat unless the invader is in your home and the threat is immediate to life and limb.

      Now further south the law in North Carolina is that you have the right of stand-your-ground and in the home invasion scenario you can use lethal force against any invader trying to force their way into the "curtilage" of your home but you cannot use lethal force in the protection of property or against aggressors who are fleeing from you. In other words the law is designed to give you the tools necessary to neutralize a legitimate threat but once the threat ceases to be (either because, for example; the aggressor is fleeing or is incapacitated) the use of lethal force no longer becomes legal.

      My guess is, if anything, the woman in the article might be found liable for property damage but nothing more. Also hitting a target with a shotgun loaded with birdshot is not as an amazing feat as the article would make it seem.

      tl;dr: Castle doctrine and stand-your-ground is not as clear-cut as people think it is.

    4. Re:Next Phase by Mr+D+from+63 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Here's a novel idea. How about a drone operator inform a property owner that he or she would like to fly the drone over the property, and explain why in advance?

    5. Re:Next Phase by sabri · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Texas and ISIS are the only places in the world where you can just shoot down anybody who enters "your" property.

      Except that an aircraft flying over your property is not entering your property.
      If I fly at 1500ft over your property, I'm not entering your property. In fact, the FARs allow for me to get to 500ft over your property. Below that I'm violating minimum altitude rules.

      My point is that the FAA governs airspace and airplanes. Any craft that flies on its own power is an aircraft, remotely piloted or not. And the FAA governs all of that, not the individual states. A state cannot legally prohibit me from flying anywhere, only the FAA can.

      --
      I'm not a complete idiot... Some parts are missing.
    6. Re:Next Phase by Swave+An+deBwoner · · Score: 4, Funny

      I'm guessing that he sells bibles door to door.

    7. Re:Next Phase by Pseudonym · · Score: 4, Informative

      There is never a reason to burgle someone.

      You be sure to tell the judge that when it's a cop who stole your money.

      (Yes, that's the more likely scenario.)

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    8. Re:Next Phase by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 4, Informative

      "It's interesting to note that the crime of burglary in Missouri includes the escape of the burglars. In light of this, it is completely legal to combine the burglary statute and the castle doctrine statute to justify shooting a burglar in the back as they flee the scene."

      Homeowners here in Arizona have the same right. The SCOTUS has ruled that police, being held to professional rules of engagement, may not shoot a fleeing suspect. Homeowners are not deemed to be law enforcement professionals.

    9. Re:Next Phase by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      If I fly at 1500ft over your property, I'm not entering your property. In fact, the FARs allow for me to get to 500ft over your property. Below that I'm violating minimum altitude rules.

      I suspect that if someone manages to shoot down your drone with a shotgun (which has an effective range of at most 300ft or so), you are violating minimum altitude rules from a FARs (Federal Aviation Regulations) perspective. Besides, the whole FARs point is a bit moot because the new *maximum* altitude allowed for a drone is 500ft (presumably to avoid interference with aircraft at minimum FARs altitude)...

      Not that I condone shooting drones...

      FAR Sec. 91.119 — Minimum safe altitudes: General.

      Except when necessary for takeoff or landing, no person may operate an aircraft below the following altitudes:
      (a) Anywhere. An altitude allowing, if a power unit fails, an emergency landing without undue hazard to persons or property on the surface.

      (b) Over congested areas. Over any congested area of a city, town, or settlement, or over any open air assembly of persons, an altitude of 1,000 feet above the highest obstacle within a horizontal radius of 2,000 feet of the aircraft.

      (c) Over other than congested areas. An altitude of 500 feet above the surface, except over open water or sparsely populated areas. In those cases, the aircraft may not be operated closer than 500 feet to any person, vessel, vehicle, or structure.

    10. Re:Next Phase by wierd_w · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The speed is less important than energy delivered at site of impact. If the energy delivered is sufficient that the mechanical strain on the string snaps it on contact, rather than tangling on it, then there is a problem with using silly string on the faster moving but less massive drone rotor blades.

      Fan rotors move slower, but are more massive, and have more total energy behind them.

      You dont need something to be sharp or fast moving to cut you in half; it just needs to exert enough energy over a small area to cause mechanical shear of your body. Getting a loop of wire from a wench wrapped around a leg and slowly slooped up will chop it off just as surely as if the wire was moving fast but at less torque.

      The same is true of the silly string vs the fan. If the blade impact is of appropriate energy/volume, regardless of the speed, it will sever the silly string. The fan blade actually has more energy than the rotor prop does. People have had their hands mangled by metal fan blades since at least the 30s, because metal blades are heavy, and when spun up, deliver a lot of kinetic energy on a small area if they encounter living flesh. Thas why the housings on metal bladed fans have suchanged tight wire mesh on them. It's to keep kids from putting fingers in and losing them.

      To be a proper experiment, it needs to be a high speed metal bladed fan, with big heavy blades. I can probably find one if I look hard enough.

    11. Re:Next Phase by unrtst · · Score: 4, Interesting

      ...while posing no collateral risk to your own forces...

      My money is on the shotgun being far safer in every way, as well as more readily available and inexpensive.
      shotgun: about $200 - $300
      shotgun shells: 100 for around $20
      not only takes down drone, but may make the pieces smaller and less dangerous to those on the ground when it falls from the air
      mass produced, tested, standard, safeties in place, well known interface and readily available training for those that don't know it
      has other legitimate uses, like defending ones self from the drone owner when he comes to pick up the bits (see the case from TFS)

      Silly string: $1.60 - $2.50 per can
      Silly string is flammable**: https://www.youtube.com/result...
      Compressed air solution:
      * compressor: expensive and not portable (luggable maybe)
      * co2 cartridges: not enough capacity at normal sizes
      * compressed air cylinders: good luck lugging those around for long (or for many shots)
      Safety systems on your homemade PoS potato gun: none
      If you manage to hit anything with this, and if it works (which is unlikely), the whole thing is going to fall into your people while some rotors are probably still spinning savagely.
      If it comes down, it's probably going to be severely damaged by the fall.
      Single taskers are bad, just ask Alton Brown.

      Hopefully you just have a case of NIH syndrome, and not some silly fear of 165+yr old tech.

      ** they make non-flammable ones these days too, but someone will put the wrong stuff in your home made gun

    12. Re: Next Phase by amiga3D · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I'm okay with shooting them if they break in but not if they're in the process of running away. There is no way to consider them a threat at that point, it's just retaliation. I had someone break into my home years ago when I lived in a rough part of town. My wife woke me when she heard a noise in the other room. I reached under the bed and pulled my 12 gauge out and went to the bedroom door and listened and sure enough I heard someone rummaging around in my living room. I jacked a shell into the chamber and the guy instantly started running and tripped over the coffee table. By the time I moved down the hall he was out the door and tearing ass down the road. It looked like a teen that lived down the block but I couldn't be sure. I was only 20 at the time and I was pretty blase about crap like that. I didn't even bother calling the cops. I lived there another year but never had another problem. I could have lit him up but I really just wanted him to leave. Number 6 shot makes a mess and I didn't need blood everywhere not to mention all the questions and shit.

    13. Re:Next Phase by stealth_finger · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You sound like the world would be losing something in an owner who does not control their dog.

      It wont...

      You sound like the type of person who thinks you should be able to kill any one for just about anything, even looking at you funny. The world would be better off without you.

      --
      Wanna buy a shirt?
      https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
    14. Re:Next Phase by cayenne8 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Texas and ISIS are the only places in the world where you can just shoot down anybody who enters "your" property.

      Depends how good you are at disposing of the body after.

      In New Orleans, if you shoot an intruder in your home and he somehow makes it out the door....the cops will generally help drag the body back across the threshold for you, so that the court case doesn't get "messy" for the home owner.

      Very nice of them!!

      ;)

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  2. No such thing as a .20 gauge by damn_registrars · · Score: 4, Informative

    The .410 bore is a size of shotgun shell, as is the 20 gauge. There is no decimal in the 20.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    1. Re:No such thing as a .20 gauge by s122604 · · Score: 5, Informative

      .410 is a measurement of the diameter of the bore.
      "gauge" is a measurement how many lead balls, cast into balls the size of the bore, you would need to equal some weight ( a pound I think, I refuse to google it...).

    2. Re:No such thing as a .20 gauge by Anubis+IV · · Score: 4, Informative

      The OP is correct in saying that the ".20 gauge" mentioned in the summary makes no sense, since it would suggest a shotgun large enough to fire lead balls that each weighed 5 pounds. We'd practically be talking about small cannonballs at that point.

      Both ".410" and "20-gauge" (with no decimal) are valid ways to refer to a shotgun. The former does so directly by telling you that the bore size is .410, as you said. The latter does so indirectly, since you can use the gauge to calculate the caliber (as you alluded to, shotgun gauges tell you how many lead balls you'd need at that caliber to equal one pound). In the case of a 20-gauge shotgun (i.e. a shotgun that has a caliber the size of a lead ball that is 1/20th a pound), it's a .615 caliber. But few people refer to 20-gauges that way, so far as I know.

      All of which is to say, while ".410" and "20-gauge" are valid ways to refer to shotguns, ".410-gauge" is not (because .410 is a bore size, not a gauge) nor is ".20-gauge" (because it's supposed to be "20-gauge", not ".20-gauge").

  3. I know what happened next by portwojc · · Score: 4, Funny

    She got to clean the shotgun again.

  4. America in one sentence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    "Youngman told Ars that she had just returned from church one Sunday morning and was cleaning her two shotguns -- .410 and a .20 gauge -- on her porch"

    Yeesh.

    1. Re:America in one sentence by Reaperducer · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yes, she has a different lifestyle than yours. She must be mocked and ridiculed.

      Way to celebrate diversity there, homie.

      --
      -- I'm old enough to have lived through six different meanings of the word "hacker."
  5. Good for the Goose by Tulsa_Time · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ask "the same Robert Duvall from The Godfather" if he would be ok with one of those hovering over his home.... I am sure he is fine with the press/paparazzi using those. If it was scaring her cows and invading her privacy... all I can say is "good shot".

    --
    5 out of 6 people enjoy Russian Roulette & 6 out of 7 Dwarfs are not Happy
  6. Case Backwards by ytene · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If you look at this from another perspective, Jennifer Youngman was just in the process of test-firing one of her just-cleaned shotguns, when a drone, flying dangerously low over her property, was unfortunate enough to stray into the line of fire.

    I fail to see how this is Jennifer Youngman's problem. Had the drone operator been sensible enough to fly their drone in a public recreation area, or drone park, instead of over private property, their loss could have been avoided.


    In a kind-of unrelated comment, how can it be illegal and tresspassing to stand on private land belonging to another, yet legal and OK to be hovering an unspecified distance above the same piece of land? "No, Your Honor, I was *not* tresspassing, I was levitating..."

  7. better quotes form the linked article(s) by tomhath · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Youngman said the intruding pair quickly brought attention to themselves when they exited their SUV, parked in front of Duvall's residence.

    Youngman said a series of burglaries in the area a few years ago, coupled with sightseers, has caused an increase in neighborhood awareness, as well as action by Duvall's security team.

    Youngman said she believed in 2nd Amendment rights and also was irritated that people would try to disturb Duvall.

    “The man is a national treasure and they should leave him the fuck alone,” she said.

    The Fauquier County Sheriff’s Office said it had no record of anyone formally complaining about this incident.

    Sounds like a good neighbor.

  8. Whitehouse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If they won't let you fly a drone over the white house without permissions, then it shouldn't be allowed over my house either without my permission. I think ruling in favor of damages is a terrible precedent.

  9. Re:25 to 30 feet above the trees? by asylumx · · Score: 4, Informative
    If news helicopters are flying that low, they are violating FAA minimum altitude regulations anyway (91.119).

    (c) Over other than congested areas. An altitude of 500 feet above the surface, except over open water or sparsely populated areas. In those cases, the aircraft may not be operated closer than 500 feet to any person, vessel, vehicle, or structure.

    (d) Helicopters, powered parachutes, and weight-shift-control aircraft. If the operation is conducted without hazard to persons or property on the surface—

    (1) A helicopter may be operated at less than the minimums prescribed in paragraph (b) or (c) of this section, provided each person operating the helicopter complies with any routes or altitudes specifically prescribed for helicopters by the FAA; and

    (2) A powered parachute or weight-shift-control aircraft may be operated at less than the minimums prescribed in paragraph (c) of this section.

  10. Gun Control by sycodon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Now THAT'S what Gun Control is all about...hitting your target on the first shot, and a kill shot to boot.

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
  11. Re:25 to 30 feet above the trees? by OrangeTide · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If it is the size of a car and makes helicopter noises, then I wouldn't recommend shooting it. Someone would make a federal case out of it, which is probably going to be split from the separate issue of the state's castle doctrine and stand your ground laws. You theoretically could be found justified in killing the helicopter pilot, but get 20 years for shooting down an aircraft.

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  12. Trees look pretty tall to me by JoeyRox · · Score: 4, Informative

    Local TV news interview with woman:

    http://www.wusa9.com/news/loca...

  13. Re:Courtesy? by somenickname · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If there isn't enough nearly public land for the activity then don't buy a drone. If you don't live near lakes that allow boats, you don't buy one anyway, use it where it doesn't belong and then shrug and say, "Sorry, no other place to use my boat".

  14. Re:Photo in the studio! by JustNiz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Here's a thought, maybe she's not a techy geek hipster millenial who thinks that the worst thing that could ever happen to them is to be temporarily disconnected from TwitterBook.

  15. And Robert Duvall commented: by ctrl-alt-canc · · Score: 5, Funny

    "I love the smell of 7.5 birdshot in the morning".