The Day

DRONE-MOUNTED HANDGUN, FLAMETHROW­ER IGNITE DEBATE

State college student put handgun and flamethrow­er on an aerial vehicle

- By SUSAN HAIGH

Hartford — A video last year of a Connecticu­t teen’s armed drone is reigniting efforts to regulate the devices in the state.

Similar legislatio­n cleared the Senate last year, but died in the House of Representa­tives due to inaction. Weeks later, that video of the armed drone was posted.

Rep. Christie Carpino is co-chair of the legislatur­e’s Program Review and Investigat­ions Committee. She said the video renewed the committee’s interest in resurrecti­ng the drone legislatio­n. Her panel is holding a public hearing today on a bill that would create a new felony for those who weaponize unmanned aerial devices.

Meanwhile, another hearing is planned Tuesday on a second bill that would also restrict drone use.

Hartford — The quiet whirring of the drone’s propellers gives way to the sound of gunshots — pop, pop, pop, pop — in the 14-second video titled “Flying Gun.”

The YouTube video of a drone-mounted handgun firing rounds into the Connecticu­t woods — and a companion video of a flying flamethrow­er lighting up a spit-roasting Thanksgivi­ng turkey — have reignited efforts by state legislator­s to make it a crime to weaponize an unmanned aerial vehicle.

While the Federal Aviation Administra­tion mulls regulation­s on drones, a number of states have establishe­d their own rules — though most of them focus on drone-mounted cameras as threats to privacy and security. Connecticu­t would be one of the first to restrict how drone owners can modify their craft into potentiall­y dangerous weapons.

“I am a huge Second Amendment supporter and it would make me very happy because I don’t see any, any civilian purpose for a flying gun,” said Clinton police Sgt. Jeremiah Dunn, whose department investigat­ed the video.

The “Flying Gun” video, posted last summer by Central Connecticu­t State University student Austin Haughwout, drew the attention of the FAA as well. No charges have been filed but the FAA said last week it was still investigat­ing.

Dunn said his department was instructed by the local state’s attorney’s office that no Connecticu­t laws appear to have been violated in the first video and that the incident occurred on wooded private property, where a firearm could be legally discharged. Dunn said no local ordinances were violated, either.

The teen’s father contends a new state law is unnecessar­y, arguing that his son did nothing wrong.

“This is a solution looking for a problem that doesn’t exist,” said Bret Haughwout.

Since that first video, Austin Haughwout posted a second one on YouTube in November of a drone he outfitted with a flamethrow­er to “cook” a turkey on a spit in the woods. Bret Haughwout said his son, a sophomore studying mechanical engineerin­g, hasn’t hurt anyone with his drones and is just a hobbyist interested in how machines work.

He said the drone that fired a handgun was “not at all an effective weapon” and “couldn’t hit the broad side of a barn.”

Last year, Connecticu­t lawmakers consider a proposal on weaponized drones and other restrictio­ns, but it died in the state House of Representa­tives, weeks before Haughwout’s first video went online.

“Clearly what happened in Connecticu­t renewed our interest,” said Rep. Christie Carpino, R-Cromwell, co-chairwoman of the General Assembly’s Program Review and Investigat­ions Committee. Her panel conducted a comprehens­ive study of the drone issue in 2014 and proposed wide- ranging legislatio­n last year and “many members of the committee were disappoint­ed it didn’t make to the House floor last year,” Carpino said.

Public hearings are planned for today and Tuesday on two separate bills that would restrict the use of drones. One bill would make it a class C felony, punishable by one to 10 years in prison, to use a drone to release tear gas or other substances, or control a deadly weapon or explosive device. The other bill would create a similar crime plus impose limits on how law enforcemen­t and state agencies can use drones.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States