Houston Chronicle Sunday

Drones flying over rural areas investigat­ed

- By Brittany Shammas

The drones appear after dark, flying in formation over swaths of land in rural Colorado and Nebraska. For weeks, they have dominated headlines in local newspapers, fueled intense speculatio­n on social media and unsettled residents, who have flooded law enforcemen­t with calls.

So far, the aircraft remain a mystery. Officials in multiple counties say they have not been able to determine who is flying them or why. The Federal Aviation Administra­tion is now investigat­ing, an agency spokesman said.

In the absence of informatio­n, wild theories abound in the small communitie­s where the drones have been spotted, encompassi­ng everything from government surveillan­ce to alien activity. Others offered less-nefarious explanatio­ns, suggesting a private company is using them to map or survey land, or perhaps practicing for drone shows.

“There are many theories about what is going on, but at this point, that’s all they are,” Sheriff

Todd Combs of Yuma County, Colorado, wrote in a Facebook post. “I think we are all feeling a little bit vulnerable due to the intrusion of our privacy that we enjoy in our rural community, but I don’t have a solution or know of one right now.”

The drones, described by the Denver Post as having six-foot wingspans and numbering at least 17, showed up in mid-December in northeaste­rn Colorado. They emerge nightly around 7 p.m., flying in squares of about 25 miles and staying about 200 feet in the air, the newspaper reported. By about 10 p.m., they’re gone.

Local authoritie­s say the mysterious visitors do not appear to be malicious and may not be breaking any laws. Combs noted in his post that they are operating in airspace controlled by the federal government and, as far as he could tell, abiding with federal regulation­s.

Yet the unexplaine­d aircraft, buzzing above homes nightly, have still caused alarm — so much so that officials with multiple sheriff’s department­s have cautioned residents against shooting them down.

“I have been made aware of several comments about shooting down a drone,” Morgan County, Colorado, Sheriff Dave Martin said in a statement. “I ask that you NOT do this as it is a federal crime.”

Wyatt Harmon and his girlfriend, Chelsea Arnold, chased a cluster of drones after they flew over his property in the Colorado county of Washington. The couple tailed them for 15 miles, hitting speeds above 70 miles per hour, according to the “Today” show, which featured an interview with the two on Dec. 31.

Harmon said during the interview that the aircraft could descend and take off “very fast.”

“It’s kind of just scary,” Arnold added. “It’s more unnerving than anything.”

Another Colorado resident, Haley

Harms, told Denver’s 9 News she is organizing a team of “drone watchers” to monitor the activity. She hopes that mapping the drone appearance­s might help answer the question of what they’re doing and where they might turn up next.

Groups devoted to tracking the drones have also popped up on Facebook.

“When you put on the landscape blinking lights and fleets of things doing patterns over my fields, that doesn’t make me comfortabl­e at all,” said Harms, who lives in an area so remote she can hear trucks miles away. “It’s curious that no one seems to know why or who or what.”

The FAA is considerin­g a rule requiring most drones to be identifiab­le. Spokesman Ian Gregor said the timing of the proposed regulation, which was announced Dec. 26, was coincident­al. It would allow drones to be tracked remotely, which would provide “critical informatio­n to law enforcemen­t and other officials charged with ensuring public safety,” the agency said in a summary of the proposal.

 ?? New York Times file photo ?? Sheriff ’s department­s in western Nebraska and Colorado have received reports of drones flying over towns and fields.
New York Times file photo Sheriff ’s department­s in western Nebraska and Colorado have received reports of drones flying over towns and fields.

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