FBI Chief Admits Use of Drones in Skies Over U.S.

width=150Federal Aviation Administration officials claim that within the next five years there will be close to 10000 civilian drones in use once the FAA grants them greater access to U.S. skies.
FBI Director Robert Mueller told members of the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee that his agency uses drones to conduct surveillance operation over the skies of the U.S. mainland during a hearing on Wednesday.

When Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) asked Mueller if the FBI uses unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) Mueller responded yes. The UAVs are used only for important surveillance operations he noted.
 
But when he was asked if the FBI had adhered to a set of regulations governing UAV use and the protection of Americans privacy Mueller revealed formulating policies regarding drones had only recently begun.
 
He told the Senate panel that UAVs were used in a very very minimal way and very seldom.
 
Legal experts who testified before previous congressional panels including Amie Stepanovich director of the Domestic Surveillance Project Electronic Privacy Information Center claimed that before using drones domestically new privacy laws are required to protect citizens from domestic use of UAVs.
 
The majority of police and civilian drones will be much smaller than those used by the military. The U.S. military uses everything from unarmed hand-launched drones to UASs (unmanned aerial systems) that can fire Hellfire missiles and guided bombs according to Stepanovich.
 
The testifying expert Stepanovich said:
 
Current privacy protections from aerial surveillance are based on court decisions from the 1980s the Judiciary Committee was told before the widespread drone use was anticipated. In general manned helicopters and planes already have the potential to do the same kinds of surveillance and intrusive information gathering as drones but drones can be flown more cheaply for longer periods of time and at less risk to human life. That makes it likely that surveillance and information-gathering will become much more widespread.
 
Meanwhile Federal Aviation Administration officials claim that within the next five years there will be close to 10000 civilian drones in use once the FAA grants them greater access to U.S. skies.
 
Congress had directed the FAA to provide drones with widespread access to domestic airspace by 2015 but the agency is behind in its development of safety regulations and isnt expected to meet that deadline even though the FAA has granted more than two hundred permits to state and local governments police departments universities and others to experiment with using small drones.  
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