The Commercial Appeal

Inmates trying out drones to deliver phones, drugs, porn

Agencies seek ways to disrupt delivery of banned items

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USA TODAY

While large companies like Amazon test drone-delivery systems, inmates in prisons across the country are already using the devices to receive their own aerial shipments: smuggled contraband.

Documents obtained from the Justice Department by USA TODAY through a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request uncovered more than a dozen attempts to transport contraband — including mobile phones, drugs and porn — into federal prisons in the past five years. State facilities have also reported similar incidents.

Experts say current antidrone technologi­es fail to protect jails against the unmanned aerial devices that transport dangerous items, including firearms, which are almost impossible to sneak in via traditiona­l smuggling methods.

“Civilian drones are becoming more inexpensiv­e, easy to operate and powerful. A growing number of criminals seem to be recognizin­g their potential value as tools for bad deeds,” said Troy Rule, a drone legislatio­n advocate and Arizona State University law professor.

While smuggling contraband into prison through any method violates federal law, no statute bars drones from flying near correction­al facilities.

According to the documents, an inmate at the high-security federal prison in Victorvill­e, California, recruited someone to use a drone to smuggle in two cellphones in March 2015. Jail officials didn’t discover the transfer of illegal goods for five months.

Similar incidents occurred at the United States Penitentia­ry in Atwater, California, the Federal Correction­al Institutio­n in Oakdale, Louisiana, and the Federal Correction­al Institutio­n in Seagoville, Texas, the documents revealed. The Federal Bureau of Prisons withheld informatio­n about other events, citing privacy and security issues.

Last year, a recently released inmate and two accomplice­s were convicted of smuggling drugs and porn into Maryland’s Western Correction­al Institutio­n via drone. Police say several nighttime missions earned the three perpetrato­rs about $6,000 per drop.

“The threat posed by drones to introduce contraband into prison and for other means is increasing,” said Justin Long, a spokesman for the Bureau of Prisons.

Long said the agency is working with the Department of Justice and other law enforcemen­t agencies to develop new countermea­sures to keep dangerous contraband out of jails, including those smuggled in via drone.

Jail management consultant Donald Leach said smugglers could be discourage­d by introducin­g anti-drone jammers, which disable the signals on the flying objects, and a digital protective shield, which blocks the entry of drones into the facilipris­on ties by hacking into its operating system.

In the United Kingdom, at least one prison has deployed a system that deflects any drone that might fly over perimeter walls by sending a series of sensors to jam the drone’s computer and block its frequency, Leach said.

Leach, who worked as a jail administra­tor for 25 years, said drones sneaking in contraband pose a greater threat than other methods of bringing banned items into jails.

“Drones have opened up the possibilit­y of transporti­ng much bigger and much more lethal items like guns into the facilities,” he said.

While the Federal Aviation Administra­tion and some states have taken steps to restrict drone activities over sensitive sites in recent years, Rule said more needs to be done.

“The FAA lacks the resources to craft and enforce laws that could effectivel­y manage these risks in every town and city in the country, so state and local input and resources are crucial,” he said.

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